@phdthesis{Prell2024, author = {Prell, Andreas}, title = {The effects of paternal age on DNA methylation of developmentally important genes in human and bovine sperm}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-34786}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-347866}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2024}, abstract = {Western societies are steadily becoming older undergoing a clear trend of delayed parenthood. Children of older fathers have an undeniably higher risk for certain neurodevelopmental disorders and other medical conditions. Changes in the epigenetic landscape and especially in DNA methylation patterns are likely to account for a portion of this inherited disease susceptibility. DNA methylation changes during the ageing process are a well-known epigenetic feature. These so-called age-DMRs exist in developmentally important genes in the methylome of several mammalian species. However, there is only a minor overlap between the age-DMR datasets of different studies. We therefore replicated age-DMRs (which were obtained from a genome wide technique) by applying a different technical approach in a larger sample number. Here, this study confirmed 10 age-DMRs in the human and 4 in the bovine sperm epigenome from a preliminary candidate list based on RRBS. For this purpose, we used bisulphite Pyrosequencing in 94 human and 36 bovine sperm samples. These Pyrosequencing results confirm RRBS as an effective and reliable method to screen for age-DMRs in the vertebrate genome. To decipher whether paternal age effects are an evolutionary conserved feature of mammalian development, we compared methylation patterns between human and bovine sperm in orthologous regulatory regions. We discovered that the level of methylation and the age effect are both species-specific and speculate that these methylation marks reflect the lineage-specific development of each species to hit evolutionary requirements and adaptation processes. Different methylation levels between species in developmentally important genes also imply a differing mutational burden, representing a potential driver for point mutations and consequently deviations in the underlying DNA sequence of different species. Using the example of different haplotypes, this study showed the great effect of single base variations on the methylation of adjacent CpGs. Nonetheless, this study could not provide further evidence or a mechanism for the transfer of epigenetic marks to future generations. Therefore, further research in tissues from the progeny of old and young fathers is required to determine if the observed methylation changes are transmitted to the next generation and if they are associated with altered transcriptional activity of the respective genes. This could provide a direct link between the methylome of sperm from elderly fathers and the development potential of the next generation.}, subject = {Epigenetik}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Reichenbach2020, author = {Reichenbach, Juliane Renate}, title = {Paternal age effects on sperm DNA methylation and its impact on the next generation}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-19980}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-199805}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2020}, abstract = {The effect of late parenthood on the offspring´s physical and mental health status has recently become an increasingly important topic of discussion. Studies on neurodevelopmental disorders in children of older parents (Naserbakht et al., 2011) outline the negative consequences of aging fathers as unpredictable compared to the better-understood unfavorable maternal influences (Cedars et al. 2015). This may be due to the fact that lifelong production of male gametes becomes more susceptible to error, not only for somatic mutations. Non-genomic mechanisms such as epigenetic methylation also alter DNA dynamically throughout life (Jones et al., 2015) and influence the aging human sperm DNA (Jenkins et al., 2014). These methylation changes may be transmitted to the next generation via epigenetic inheritance mechanisms (Milekic et al., 2015), which may negatively impact the sensitive epigenetic regulation of cell differentiation in the embryonic period (Curley et al., 2011; Spiers et al., 2015). Accordingly, Nardone et al. (2014) reported several hypomethylated regions in autistic patients, illustrating potential epigenetic influences on the multifactorial pathogenesis of neuropsychiatric disorders. In the present study, the methylation status of five gene regions in the sperm DNA of males of different ages was analyzed by two techniques - pyrosequencing and deep bisulfite sequencing. Two gene regions, FOXK1 and DMPK, showed a highly significant age-related methylation loss and FOXK1 a reduced methylation variation at the level of single alleles. In addition, the examined gene region of FOXK1 showed significant methylation changes in the fetal cord blood DNA of the respective offspring of the sperm donor. This fact suggests a transfer of age-related methylation loss to the next generation. Interestingly, a methylation analysis at the level of single alleles showed that the methylation loss was inherited exclusively by the father. FOXK1 is a transcription factor that plays an important role in the epigenetic regulation of the cell cycle during embryonic neuronal development (Huang et al., 2004; Wijchers et al., 2006). For this reason, the methylation status of FOXK1 in the blood of autistic patients and an age- and sex-matched control group was investigated. While both groups showed age-associated FOXK1 methylation loss, a faster dynamics of methylation change was observed in the autistic group. Although further studies are needed to uncover inheritance mechanisms of epigenetic information, the present results show an evident influence of age-related methylation changes on offspring. When advising future fathers, it is important to consider how the paternal epigenome is altered by aging and can have a negative impact on the developing embryo.}, subject = {Epigenetik}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Neveling2007, author = {Neveling, Kornelia}, title = {Molecular causes and consequences of genetic instability with respect to the FA/BRCA Caretaker Pathway}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-27383}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2007}, abstract = {In the context of this thesis, I investigated the molecular causes and functional consequences of genetic instability using a human inherited disease, Fanconi anemia. FA patients display a highly variable clinical phenotype, including congenital abnormalities, progressive bone marrow failure and a high cancer risk. The FA cellular phenotype is characterized by spontaneous and inducible chromosomal instability, and a typical S/G2 phase arrest after exposure to DNA-damaging agents. So far, 13 genes have been identified, whose biallelic (or, in the case of X-linked FANCB, hemizygous) mutations cause this multisystem disorder. The FA proteins interact in a multiprotein network, instrumental and essential in the cellular response to DNA damage. A more comprehensive summary of Fanconi anemia and its myriad clinical, cellular and molecular manifestations is provided in the introduction section of this thesis. The results of my experimental work are presented as published papers and manuscripts ready to be submitted. In the first publication, I investigated the connection between FA genes and bladder tumors. The question I tried to answer was whether a disruption of the FA/BRCA pathway may be a frequent and possibly causal event in bladder cancer, explaining the hypersensitivity of these cells to DNA-crosslinking agents. On the basis of my experimental data I arrived at the conclusion that disruption of the FA/BRCA pathway might be detrimental rather than advantageous for the majority tumor types by rendering them vulnerable towards DNA damaging agents and oxidative stress. The second publication deals with the gene coding for the core complex protein FANCE and tries to answer the question why FANCE is so rarely affected among FA-patients. The conclusion from these studies is that like FANCF, FANCE functions as a probable adaptor protein with a high tolerance towards amino acid substitutions which would explain the relative rareness of FA-E patients. I have also investigated the FANCL gene whose product functions as the catalytic subunit of the E3 ligase. The third publication addresses this issue by providing the first comprehensive description of genetic alterations and phenotypic manifestations in a series of three FA-L patients. The results of my study show that genetic alterations of FANCL are compatible with survival, these alterations may include large deletions such as so far common only in the FANCA gene, FA-L phenotypes can be mild to severe, and FANCL belongs to the group of FA genes that may undergo somatic reversion. The central protein of the FA/BRCA network, FANCD2, is the subject of the fourth publication presented in this thesis. Most importantly, we were able to show that there are no biallelic null mutations in FANCD2. Correspondingly, residual protein of both FANCD2-isotypes (FANCD2-S and FANCD2-L) was present in all available patient cell lines. This suggests that complete abrogation of the FANCD2 protein cannot be tolerated and causes early embryonic lethality. There are at least three FA proteins that are not required for the posttranslational modification of FANCD2. One of these proteins is the 5'-3' helicase BRIP1 (BRCA1-interacting protein 1), a protein that interacts directly with the breast cancer susceptibility protein BRCA1. I participated in the identification of BRIP1 as the FA protein FANCJ. This discovery is described in the fifth publication of this thesis. The newly discovered protein BRIP1/FANCJ seems to act as one of the mediators of genomic maintenance downstream of FANCD2. Another protein identified downstream of FANCD2 is PALB2. PALB2 was originally discovered as "partner and localizer of BRCA2". In a candidate gene approach we tested patients with early childhood cancers but without mutations in BRCA2 for mutations in PALB2 (publication 6). PALB2 was identified as a novel FA gene and designated FANCN. FA-N patients are very severely affected. The last publication included in my thesis describes the identification of the FA gene FANCI as the second monoubiquitinated member of the FA/BRCA pathway (publication 7). We identified biallelic mutations in KIAA1794 in four FA patients, thus proving the genuine FA-nature of this candidate sequence. The general discussion provides a synopsis of the results and conclusions of my work with the state of art of FA research.}, subject = {Fanconi-An{\"a}mie}, language = {en} }