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------Widespread conservation and lineage-specific diversification of genome-wide DNA methylation patterns across arthropods.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Abstract

Cytosine methylation is an ancient epigenetic modification yet its function and extent within genomes is highly variable across eukaryotes. In mammals, methylation controls transposable elements and regulates the promoters of genes. In insects, DNA methylation is generally restricted to a small subset of transcribed genes, with both intergenic regions and transposable elements (TEs) depleted of methylation. The evolutionary origin and the function of these methylation patterns are poorly understood. Here we characterise the evolution of DNA methylation across the arthropod phylum. While the common ancestor of the arthropods had low levels of TE methylation and did not methylate promoters, both of these functions have evolved independently in centipedes and mealybugs. In contrast, methylation of the exons of a subset of transcribed genes is ancestral and widely conserved across the phylum, but has been lost in specific lineages. A similar set of genes is methylated in all species that retained exon-enriched methylation. We show that these genes have characteristic patterns of expression correlating to broad transcription initiation sites and well-positioned nucleosomes, providing new insights into potential mechanisms driving methylation patterns over hundreds of millions of years.

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Keywords

Animals, Arthropods, CpG Islands, DNA Methylation, DNA Transposable Elements, Epigenesis, Genetic, Evolution, Molecular, Exons, Phylogeny, Promoter Regions, Genetic

Journal Title

PLoS Genet

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1553-7390
1553-7404

Volume Title

16

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2016-210)
This research was supported by a Leverhulme Research Project Grant (RPG-2016-210 to F.M.J., E.A.M. and P.S.) and the Medical Research Council (MC-A652-5PY80). BL was supported by Medical Research Council UK (award MC_UP_1102/1) and Wellcome Trust Investigator Award 106954/Z/15/Z. LR was supported by a NERC fellowship (NE/K009516/1) and the Royal Society (RG160842).