Nature Communications (Aug 2025)

UHRF2 mediates resistance to DNA methylation reprogramming in primordial germ cells

  • Ambre Bender,
  • Marion Morel,
  • Michael Dumas,
  • Muriel Klopfenstein,
  • Naël Osmani,
  • Maxim V. C. Greenberg,
  • Déborah Bourc’his,
  • Norbert B. Ghyselinck,
  • Michael Weber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-61954-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract In mammals, primordial germ cells (PGCs) undergo global erasure of DNA methylation with delayed demethylation of germline genes and selective retention of DNA methylation at evolutionarily young retrotransposons. However, the molecular mechanisms of persistent DNA methylation in PGCs remain unclear. Here we report that resistance to DNA methylation reprogramming in PGCs requires UHRF2, the paralog of the DNMT1 cofactor UHRF1. PGCs from Uhrf2 knock-out mice show loss of retrotransposon DNA methylation, while DNA methylation is unaffected in somatic cells. This is not associated with changes in the expression of retrotransposons in E13.5 PGCs, indicating that other mechanisms compensate for retrotransposon control at this stage. Furthermore, Uhrf2-deficient PGCs show precocious demethylation of germline genes and overexpress meiotic genes in females. Subsequently, Uhrf2-deficient mice show impaired oocyte development and female-specific reduced fertility, as well as incomplete remethylation of retrotransposons during spermatogenesis. These findings reveal a crucial function for the UHRF1 paralog UHRF2 in controlling DNA methylation in the germline.