The reason this experiment is so important is that it offers hope that we may be able to find new treatments for really complex neurological conditions. Prior to the publication of this
DNA methylation is clearly really important. Defects in reading DNA methylation can lead to a complex and devastating neurological disorder that leaves children with Rett syndrome severely disabled throughout their lives. DNA methylation is also essential for maintaining the correct patterns of gene expression in different cell types, either for several decades in the case of our long-lived neurons, or in all daughters of a stem cell in a constantly-replaced tissue such as skin.
But we still have a conceptual problem. Neurons are very different from skin cells. If both cells types use DNA methylation to switch off certain genes, and to keep them switched off, they must be using the methylation at different sets of genes. Otherwise they would all be expressing the same genes, to the same extent, and they would inevitably then be the same types of cells instead of being neurons and skin cells.
The solution to how two cell types can use the same mechanism to create such different outcomes lies in how DNA methylation gets targeted to different regions of the genome in different cell types. This takes us into the second great area of molecular epigenetics. Proteins.
DNA has a friend
DNA is often described as if it’s a naked molecule, i.e. DNA and nothing else. If we visualise it at all in our minds, a DNA double helix probably looks like a very long twisty railway track. This is pretty much how we described it in the previous chapter. But in reality it’s actually nothing like that, and many of the great breakthroughs in epigenetics came about when scientists began to appreciate this fully.
DNA is intimately associated with proteins, and in particular with proteins called histones. At the moment most attention in epigenetics and gene regulation is focused on four particular histone proteins called H2A, H2B, H3 and H4. These histones have a structure known as ‘globular’, as they are folded into compact ball-like shapes. However, each also has a loose floppy chain of amino acids that sticks out of the ball, which is called the histone tail. Two copies of each of these four histone proteins come together to form a tight structure called the histone octamer (so called because it’s formed of eight individual histones).
It might be easiest to think of this octamer as eight ping-pong balls stacked on top of each other in two layers. DNA coils tightly around this protein stack like a long liquorice whip around marshmallows, to form a structure called the nucleosome. One hundred and forty seven base-pairs of DNA coil around each nucleosome. Figure 4.3 is a very simplified representation of the structure of a nucleosome, where the white strand is DNA and the grey wiggles are the histone tails.
Figure 4.3
The histone octamer (2 molecules each of histones H2A, H2B, H3 and H4) stacked tightly together, and with DNA wrapped around it, forms the basic unit of chromatin called the nucleosome.If we had read anything about histones even just fifteen years ago, they would probably have been described as ‘packaging proteins’, and left at that. It’s certainly true that DNA has to be packaged. The nucleus of a cell is usually only about 10 microns in diameter – that’s 1/100th of a millimetre – and if the DNA in a cell was just left all floppy and loose it could stretch for 2 metres. The DNA is curled tightly around the histone octamers and these are all stacked closely on top of each other.