Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Disruption of DNA methylation-mediated cranial neural crest proliferation and differentiation causes orofacial clefts in mice.

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

January 16, 2024

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Volume/Issue

121/3

ISSN

1091-6490

Orofacial clefts of the lip and palate are widely recognized to result from complex gene-environment interactions, but inadequate understanding of environmental risk factors has stymied development of prevention strategies. We interrogated the role of DNA methylation, an environmentally malleable epigenetic mechanism, in orofacial development. Expression of the key DNA methyltransferase enzyme DNMT1 was detected throughout palate morphogenesis in the epithelium and underlying cranial neural crest cell (cNCC) mesenchyme, a highly proliferative multipotent stem cell population that forms orofacial connective tissue. Genetic and pharmacologic manipulations of DNMT activity were then applied to define the tissue- and timing-dependent requirement of DNA methylation in orofacial development. cNCC-specific inactivation targeting initial palate outgrowth resulted in OFCs, while later targeting during palatal shelf elevation and elongation did not. Conditional deletion reduced cNCC proliferation and subsequent differentiation trajectory, resulting in attenuated outgrowth of the palatal shelves and altered development of cNCC-derived skeletal elements. Finally, we found that the cellular mechanisms of cleft pathogenesis observed in vivo can be recapitulated by pharmacologically reducing DNA methylation in multipotent cNCCs cultured in vitro. These findings demonstrate that DNA methylation is a crucial epigenetic regulator of cNCC biology, define a critical period of development in which its disruption directly causes OFCs, and provide opportunities to identify environmental influences that contribute to OFC risk.

Alternate Journal

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

PubMed ID

38194455

PubMed Central ID

PMC10801837

Authors

Caden M Ulschmid
Miranda R Sun
Christopher R Jabbarpour
Austin C Steward
Kenneth S Rivera-González
Jocelyn Cao
Alexander A Martin
Macy Barnes
Lorena Wicklund
Andy Madrid
Ligia A Papale
Diya B Joseph
Chad M Vezina
Reid S Alisch
Robert J Lipinski

Keywords

Mice
Animals
Cell Proliferation
DNA Methylation
Cleft Palate
DNA Modification Methylases
Neural Crest
Cleft Lip
Brain