Cell Reports (Sep 2024)

Parent-of-origin-specific DNA replication timing is confined to large imprinted regions

  • Matthew M. Edwards,
  • Ning Wang,
  • Ido Sagi,
  • Shay Kinreich,
  • Nissim Benvenisty,
  • Jeannine Gerhardt,
  • Dieter Egli,
  • Amnon Koren

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 9
p. 114700

Abstract

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Summary: Genomic imprinting involves differential DNA methylation and gene expression between homologous paternal and maternal loci. It remains unclear, however, whether DNA replication also shows parent-of-origin-specific patterns at imprinted or other genomic regions. Here, we investigate genome-wide asynchronous DNA replication utilizing uniparental human embryonic stem cells containing either maternal-only (parthenogenetic) or paternal-only (androgenetic) DNA. Four clusters of imprinted genes exhibited differential replication timing based on parent of origin, while the remainder of the genome, 99.82%, showed no significant replication asynchrony between parental origins. Active alleles in imprinted gene clusters replicated earlier than their inactive counterparts. At the Prader-Willi syndrome locus, replication asynchrony spanned virtually the entirety of S phase. Replication asynchrony was carried through differentiation to neuronal precursor cells in a manner consistent with gene expression. This study establishes asynchronous DNA replication as a hallmark of large imprinted gene clusters.

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