DNA Methylation and Histone Modifications
DNA methylation and histone modifications are the two best-characterised systems of covalent epigenetic marking. Acting on the DNA itself and on the histone proteins around which DNA is wrapped, they help set patterns of gene expression that are heritable through cell division without altering the underlying DNA sequence. This area groups the chemical marks, the enzymes that place and remove them, and the proteins that interpret them.
Definition
DNA methylation and histone modifications are covalent, enzymatically reversible chemical changes to DNA bases and to histone proteins that modulate chromatin structure and gene transcription while leaving the DNA sequence unchanged, and that together constitute a core layer of epigenetic regulation.
Scope
The area orients the reader to covalent marks on chromatin: methylation of cytosine in DNA, and the acetylation, methylation, and related modifications of histone tails. It introduces the enzyme families that establish, interpret, and reverse these marks, and the way the two systems are mechanistically linked. Detailed treatment of each mark and enzyme class is delegated to the topic entries; the area itself is an orienting overview and is not clinical guidance.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- How do covalent marks on DNA and histones influence whether a gene is transcribed?
- Which enzyme families place, read, and remove these marks, and how is their activity targeted?
- How are DNA methylation and histone modification systems mechanistically coupled?
- How are these marks propagated through DNA replication to give epigenetic memory?
Key concepts
- Covalent chromatin marks
- 5-methylcytosine
- Histone tail modifications
- Writers, readers, and erasers
- Cross-talk between DNA methylation and histone marks
- Heritable gene-expression states
- Heterochromatin and euchromatin
Key theories
- Histone code hypothesis
- Distinct combinations of histone modifications are proposed to constitute a 'code' that is read by effector proteins to specify chromatin states and transcriptional outcomes, extending the information capacity of the genome beyond the DNA sequence.
- Epigenetic memory through covalent marks
- DNA methylation patterns, propagated by maintenance methyltransferases after replication, provide a mechanism by which gene-expression states are remembered across cell generations.
Mechanisms
Two interacting layers operate on chromatin. In the first, methyl groups are added to cytosine bases in DNA, predominantly at CpG dinucleotides, which can recruit repressive complexes and stabilise transcriptional silencing. In the second, the N-terminal tails of histones are decorated with acetyl, methyl, and other groups that alter chromatin compaction and create docking sites for effector proteins. The two layers are coupled: methylated DNA and specific histone marks recruit one another's machinery, reinforcing repressive or permissive states. Marks are placed by 'writer' enzymes, recognised by 'reader' modules, and removed by 'eraser' enzymes, making the system dynamic and reversible.
Clinical relevance
Covalent epigenetic marks are altered in many disease states, and understanding them underpins the interpretation of epigenetic and epigenomic studies in the health sciences. This area describes how the marks and their enzymes are organised as a reference for further study; it is descriptive and is not a basis for individual diagnosis or treatment decisions.
Evidence & guidelines
The area synthesises foundational and review-level literature on chromatin biology. The coupling of DNA methylation and histone modification systems and their role in heritable gene regulation are well established in molecular biology, though specific mark-to-function assignments continue to be refined as genome-wide mapping methods mature.
History
The recognition that DNA methylation could carry heritable regulatory information emerged in the 1970s and 1980s, and Bird's synthesis framed it as a basis for epigenetic memory. In parallel, the discovery that histone tails are extensively and reversibly modified, crystallised by Strahl and Allis's 'language of covalent histone modifications', established the second major mark system. The two strands converged into an integrated view of covalent chromatin marking over the following two decades.
Key figures
- C. David Allis
- Thomas Jenuwein
- Adrian Bird
- Tony Kouzarides
- Howard Cedar
Related topics
Seminal works
- bird-2002
- strahl-allis-2000
- kouzarides-2007
- cedar-bergman-2009
Frequently asked questions
- Do DNA methylation and histone modifications change the DNA sequence?
- No. Both are covalent chemical marks on DNA bases or histone proteins that influence gene expression and chromatin structure without altering the underlying nucleotide sequence, which is what makes them epigenetic.
- How are the two mark systems related?
- They are mechanistically coupled: methylated DNA and particular histone modifications can recruit each other's enzymes and reader proteins, so that the two systems reinforce shared repressive or permissive chromatin states.
Methods for this concept
- Epigenome-wide association study
- Multi-omics epigenome-wide association study
- Time-series Epigenome-wide Association Study
- Differential Epigenome-Wide Association Study
- ATAC-seq Analysis
- Epigenome-wide association study in educational research
- Network-based epigenome-wide association study
- Bayesian epigenome-wide association study