BMC Genomics (Jun 2024)

Developmentally dynamic changes in DNA methylation in the human pancreas

  • Ailsa MacCalman,
  • Elisa De Franco,
  • Alice Franklin,
  • Christine S. Flaxman,
  • Sarah J. Richardson,
  • Kathryn Murrall,
  • Joe Burrage,
  • Barts Pancreas Tissue Bank (BPTB),
  • Emma M. Walker,
  • Noel G. Morgan,
  • Andrew T. Hattersley,
  • Emma L. Dempster,
  • Eilis Hannon,
  • Aaron R. Jeffries,
  • Nick D. L. Owens,
  • Jonathan Mill

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-024-10450-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Development of the human pancreas requires the precise temporal control of gene expression via epigenetic mechanisms and the binding of key transcription factors. We quantified genome-wide patterns of DNA methylation in human fetal pancreatic samples from donors aged 6 to 21 post-conception weeks. We found dramatic changes in DNA methylation across pancreas development, with > 21% of sites characterized as developmental differentially methylated positions (dDMPs) including many annotated to genes associated with monogenic diabetes. An analysis of DNA methylation in postnatal pancreas tissue showed that the dramatic temporal changes in DNA methylation occurring in the developing pancreas are largely limited to the prenatal period. Significant differences in DNA methylation were observed between males and females at a number of autosomal sites, with a small proportion of sites showing sex-specific DNA methylation trajectories across pancreas development. Pancreas dDMPs were not distributed equally across the genome and were depleted in regulatory domains characterized by open chromatin and the binding of known pancreatic development transcription factors. Finally, we compared our pancreas dDMPs to previous findings from the human brain, identifying evidence for tissue-specific developmental changes in DNA methylation. This study represents the first systematic exploration of DNA methylation patterns during human fetal pancreas development and confirms the prenatal period as a time of major epigenomic plasticity.

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