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Chapter twelve 12 EPIGENETIC CONTROL OF CELLULAR DIFFERENTIATION All the information needed to construct an adult organism can be found in the genomes of any number of its nucleated cells, but because the body is composed of a wide variety of different cell types capable of performing very different functions, there must be mechanisms to control the way in which information encoded in the genome can be selectively controlled. Different types of cells arise early in embryonic development, and epigenetic control of gene expression is used to establish specific gene expression patterns that distinguish individual types of cells. The process by which different cell types arise is known as differentiation. 12.1 FROM CELLULAR TOTIPOTENCY TO PLURIPOTENCY The early embryos of most multicellular eukaryotes begin as groups of cells that are termed totipotent because each cell seems to have an equal ability to become any of the cell types generated as the embryo develops. Figure 12.1 shows some of the stages of pre-implantation development that apply to mammals. The blue spheroids are referred to as blastomeres and are totipotent. The first differentiation of these cells takes place between the morula and early blastocyst stages, when those blastomeres that happen to be on the outside of the morula become trophoblast cells, which are destined to become parts of the placenta. Only the cells referred to as the inner cell mass (ICM) of the blastocyst will give rise to the tissues of the developing embryo. 12.1 FROM CELLULAR TOTIPOTENCY TO PLURIPOTENCY 12.2 MAINTENANCE OF PLURIPOTENCY IN EMBRYONIC STEM CELLS 12.3 DIFFERENTIATION OF EMBRYONIC STEM CELLS 12.4 BIVALENT CHROMATIN DOMAINS IN NEURAL STEM CELLS 12.5 CHROMATIN PROFILE OF HEMATOPOIETIC PROGENITORS Once formed, the trophoblast cannot produce any of the cells that normally derive from the inner cell mass. Moreover, trophoblast cells can never revert to totipotent blastomeres under normal circumstances. This brings up an important point that must be borne in mind in any consideration of the process of cellular differentiation: it is almost always unidirectional. Similarly, the ICM cannot produce trophoblast cells (in a normal embryo); its cells are therefore referred to a pluripotent (that is, able to give rise to many cell types but not all). The ICM is of great interest to science because removing this structure and culturing it under special growth conditions gives rise to embryonic stem cells, which may be thought of as a “snapshot” of a very brief period of embryonic development. It is brief indeed, because a few days after the blastocyst has implanted in the wall of the uterus, the ICM differentiates into three primordial layers that will produce the organs and structures of the body (Figure 12.2) and pluripotent cells no longer exist in the body. Epigenetics_Chapter_12.indd 171 01/11/2013 14:46 172 Chapter 12: Oocyte EPIGENETIC CONTROL OF CELLULAR DIFFERENTIATION 1-cell 2-cell 4-cell 8–16-cell 16–32-cell early blastocyst first fate decision late blastocyst second fate decision EpiG12f01 Figure 12.1 The stages of pre-implantation development. The totipotent fertilized oocyte undergoes a series of divisions to generate an 8–16-cell stage referred to as the morula. After this stage, the outer cells differentiate to become the trophectoderm (the first fate decision) while the inner cells are destined to become the inner cell mass, which subsequently differentiates into the primitive endoderm and epiblast by the late blastocyst stage of development. [Adapted from ZernickaGoetz M, Morris SA & Bruce AW (2009) Nat. Rev. Genet. 10, 467. With permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd.] There are some possible exceptions to this rule, because recent studies suggest that the bone marrow and reproductive organs may contain small populations of apparently pluripotent cells. However, the evidence for this is inconclusive so far. With the exception of erythrocytes and post-meiotic gametes, most of the cells of the developing organism contain an identical copy of the original genome that was generated by the combination of the two parental genomes shortly after fertilization. The basis of cell differentiation is that specific patterns of gene expression apply to different types of cells, but the fact that they all probably possess the same genome implies that epigenetic regulation must control the cell-type-specific expression pattern. It is important to understand how this works, but the subject is worthy of an entire volume in its own right and we can only give a few select examples. A useful first step is to examine how the pluripotent state is maintained, because this will help us to understand how the cells of the ICM may be able to make fate decisions that allow them to produce multiple cell types. We will follow this with some examples of the pathways leading to the differentiation of specific cell types, although it must be said skin cells of epidermis neuron of brain pigment cell gastrula ectoderm Figure 12.2 Three primordial germ layers arise during embryonic development. These originate from the ICM and are known as ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. These produce different parts of the body, as shown. For example, the cells of the ectoderm give rise to the skin, peripheral nerves, and CNS, whereas the mesoderm produces bones, blood, kidneys, muscles, and heart. The endoderm produces organs such as the lungs, liver, and digestive tract. mesoderm cardiac muscle endoderm skeletal muscle cells tubule cell of the kidney red blood cells lung cell (alveolar cell) thyroid cell pancreatic cell smooth muscle (in gut) EpiG12f02 Epigenetics_Chapter_12.indd 172 01/11/2013 14:46 MAINTENANCE OF PLURIPOTENCY IN EMBRYONIC STEM CELLS 173 that the information provided is incomplete because the science simply has not progressed to the level where step-by-step descriptions of all the required epigenetic controls are possible at this time. 12.2 MAINTENANCE OF PLURIPOTENCY IN EMBRYONIC STEM CELLS Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) are derived from the ICM of day 5–8 blastocyst-stage or morula-stage embryos (see Figure 12.1). ESCs are pluripotent and are capable of karyotypically stable, prolonged self-renewal. They are characterized by their potential to differentiate into cells of the three germ layers both in vitro and in vivo. In contrast to the specific gene expression programs observed in differentiated cells, ESCs are defined by their potential to activate all of the gene expression programs that are found in embryonic and adult cell lineages. Various studies have endeavored to understand the molecular mechanisms that give ESCs their properties. These attempts to identify a molecular “signature” of ESCs have borne some fruit, including the identification of the transcription factors OCT4 and NANOG as markers for ESCs. However, these experiments also show that there is very little other overlapping of gene expression among different ESC lines and also among the same ESC lines studied in different laboratories. This lack of overlap raises the question of whether a common molecular identity for ESCs can be uncovered. However, recent studies have indicated that epigenetic mechanisms may regulate self-renewal, pluripotency, and lineagespecific differentiation, giving ESCs their unique characteristics. Recall that epigenetic mechanisms include modification of histone proteins, DNA methylation, ATP-dependent remodeling, incorporation of variant histones, changes in local and higher-order conformation of DNA, and RNAi. Through the combined efforts of these epigenetic mechanisms, gene expression patterns can be tightly and dynamically regulated. As an example of this regulation, the chromatin structure of mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) has now been demonstrated to be hyperdynamic, in that major architectural proteins, for example H1, H2B, H3, and HP1, are loosely bound to chromatin with very short residency times. Differentiation has been found to lead to a decrease in the dynamic nature of these proteins, as demonstrated by an increase in their residency time. These findings suggest that this dynamic nature of chromatin is specific to pluripotent cells and that differentiation leads to a restructuring of the genome. Additionally, it was demonstrated that heterochromatic markers change from a dispersed localization in mESCs to more concentrated, distinct foci in differentiated cells, with increased global levels of trimethylated lysine 9 H3 (H3K9me3)—a heterochromatic histone modification linked to gene repression (see Table 6.2)—and decreased levels of acetylated histones H3 and H4 (H3ac and H4ac). Recall that acetylation of histones is linked to euchromatin and permissivity of gene expression, and so the noted decrease in this modification is in keeping with the dampening of gene expression. Analyses of global histone modification patterns in ESCs have previously suggested that the ESC genome is subject to generalized histone acetylation and lysine 4 H3 methylation (H3K4me). As these are both transcription-activating modifications, these changes in global genomic architecture and global histone modifications suggest that the chromatin environment in ESCs is highly euchromatic, and the genome is therefore highly permissive for gene expression. This would account for the pluripotent nature of ESCs, with the genome becoming more structured, condensed, and heterochromatic during differentiation, leading to loss of pluripotency. Epigenetics_Chapter_12.indd 173 01/11/2013 14:46 174 Chapter 12: EPIGENETIC CONTROL OF CELLULAR DIFFERENTIATION Another study of mESCs sought to understand regulatory mechanisms involved in development by examining highly conserved noncoding elements (HCNEs). HCNEs were studied because they are present in regions where genes encoding developmentally important transcription factors are concentrated. Large-scale chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays found large areas of a repressive histone modification, dimethylation and trimethylation of lysine 27 histone H3 (H3K27me2/me3), alongside smaller regions of a permissive modification, H3K4me, at HCNEs. This is unusual inasmuch as these modifications are usually mutually exclusive, and so these regions were termed “bivalent” domains (Figure 12.3). Interestingly, the bivalent domains coincided with differentiationassociated transcription factor genes expressed at very low levels in the ESCs. It was therefore proposed that the bivalent domains act to silence such genes so as to maintain pluripotency while also allowing the genes to remain poised for transcription, so they can be rapidly activated on differentiation. This echoes the presence of activating histone modification such as H3K4me2 and H3K4me3 in the HOXA cluster, as described in Chapter 9. On differentiation, these bivalent domains “resolve,” so that silent genes become concentrated for H3K27me2/me3 only, and active genes become enriched for euchromatic modifications. 12.3 DIFFERENTIATION OF EMBRYONIC STEM CELLS The earliest observable differentiation events for ESCs in vitro are the decrease in pluripotent character and the appearance of characteristics of the three primordial germ layers. It is probable that several changes in gene expression precede these events, but either they are too transient to be detected with our current techniques or they make no observable changes to the morphology or behavior of the cells. Another problem is that differentiation of ESCs seems to be partly random in the laboratory. One would not expect this to be so in the developing embryo, in which ES cells Me Me Me Ac Me key developmental regulators ‘bivalent’ domains early replication Figure 12.3 Bivalent chromatin domains. In pluripotent stem cells, a large number of genes encoding key developmental regulators are marked by a combination of permissive (H3K9me2 and H3K9ac, shown in blue and green, respectively) and repressive (H3K27me3, shown in red) epigenetic marks. Such domains are usually resolved during cell differentiation when specific genes must either be expressed or permanently repressed. (Courtesy of Véronique Azuara, Imperial College London.) differentiation active early replication repressed late replication lineage-committed cells EpiG12f03 Epigenetics_Chapter_12.indd 174 01/11/2013 14:46 DIFFERENTIATION OF EMBRYONIC STEM CELLS 175 individual cells should respond to precisely regulated developmental cues telling them what to do and where to go; however, in a culture dish in the laboratory, such information is scrambled or nonexistent, and the resulting mixture of differentiated cells contains small percentages of nearly all the cell types found in the adult body. This makes the process leading to differentiation very difficult to study because we have to separate out individual cells for analysis, a task more easily done for some types of cells than for others. For example, early hematopoietic cells can be isolated in abundance because some of the proteins they express on their surfaces can be used to separate them from the cellular “soup” by using flow cytometry, but we do not have this luxury for many other cell types. Because epigenetic control systems are highly dependent on cell identity, we must restrict our description of such systems to those that can be studied in well-defined and easily accessible cells. That said, it is nevertheless worth describing some of the more global changes that take place during ESC differentiation. These changes tell us little about the mechanisms that control individual genes, but they are useful for understanding the differences in genome organization between pluripotent and differentiated cells. We saw earlier that ESCs have characteristic blocks of euchromatin throughout much of their genome with relatively little heterochromatin. Heterochromatin is detected by the presence of H3K9 dimethylation and trimethylation, and although these histone modifications do exist in the ESC genome, they do not accumulate into large blocks of H3K9 dimethylated chromatin as seems to be the case for differentiated cells. These regions known as large organized chromatin K9 modifications (LOCKs) can be up to 4.9 Mb in length and are highly conserved between human and mouse. Although they cover only 4% of the genome in mouse ESCs, they cover 31% of the genome in differentiated ESCs, 46% in mouse liver cells and 10% in brain. The positions of these LOCKs vary between cell types; some of these are shown in Figure 12.4, along with the relative positions of the genes in these regions. The level of acetylation at H3K9 is also decreased. This modification is normally associated with euchromatin, and its progressive loss is needed to make way for the H3K9 dimethylation and trimethylation associated with heterochromatinization. Chr. 8: 44000000 45000000 46000000 47000000 48000000 49000000 Figure 12.4 Summary of data from a 10 Mb region of mouse chromosome 8. Locations of LOCKs in undifferentiated mouse ES cells (green bars), differentiated ES cells (red bars), liver cells (orange bars), and brain cells (blue bars) are shown. [From Wen B, Wu H, Shinkai Y et al. (2009) Nat. Genet. 41, 246. Macmillan Publishers Ltd.] 50000000 51000000 52000000 ES LOCKs Diff. ES LOCKs Liver LOCKs Brain LOCKs Mtus1 Zfp353 Fgl1 Pcm1 Asah1 Genes Frg1 Triml1 Zfp42 Adam26b Adam26a EG384813 Adam34 EG384814 Fat1 Pdim3 Casp3 Rwdd4a Odz3 Mtnr1a Ufsp2 lrf2 lng2 F11 Snx25 Enpp6 Wwc2 Klkb1 Slc25a4 Stox2 Dctd Cyp4v3 Helt Stox2 Fam149a Acsl1 Cdkn2alp Tir3 Mlf1ip Cldn22 Sorbs2 D030016E14Rik Ccdc110 LOC100039801 1700029J07Rik Ankrd37 Lrp2bp 4933411K20Rik Ccdc111 EpiG12f04 Epigenetics_Chapter_12.indd 175 01/11/2013 14:46 Chapter 12: 176 EPIGENETIC CONTROL OF CELLULAR DIFFERENTIATION 12.4 BIVALENT CHROMATIN DOMAINS IN NEURAL STEM CELLS Generating specific differentiated cell types from ESCs can help us to describe and perhaps better understand the mechanism by which epigenetic modification controls the gene expression pattern of that cell. A commonly occurring developmental pathway from ESCs and embryonal carcinoma cells is neurogenesis; given the prevalence of defined surfacemarker proteins for the neural progenitor stage and the neural stem cell stage, separation and analysis of these cells is relatively straightforward. During human embryonic stem cell (hESC) differentiation into the neural lineage, two stages of specification can be purified by the use of flow cytometry for the CD133 surface marker and β-III tubulin (Figure 12.5). (CD133 is a marker of multipotent stem cells of many tissue types (including multipotent neural progenitor cells), and β-III tubulin is neuronspecific and indicative of more terminally differentiated cells.) The CD133-expressing neural progenitor cells show substantial downregulation of pluripotency-associated genes compared with their ESC expression levels, and up-regulation of neural marker genes such as SOX1, SOX3, PAX7, and Nestin. Even though these latter genes are differentiation-specific, they are still expressed at low levels in ESCs; however, these levels are so much lower than in the neural progenitor cells that the expression is probably of no functional significance. In line with (a) H9-derived CD133+ve population (b) β-III-tubulin immunostaining of EC and H9-derived neuronal lineages 105 H9 monolayer-positive CD133+ve cells CD133 H9-derived monolayers 103 104 CD133 CD34 102 103 104 CD34 102 102 103 104 105 H9 monolayer-negative 105 102 103 104 β-III-tubulin 105 H9-derived β-III-tubulin+ve population β-III-tubulin-monolayer poly-D-lysine/laminin Merged (ab+DAPI) 50 70 10 30 50 70 β-III-tubulin-control pDi BIII+ 10 30 BIII+ 102 103 104 105 102 103 104 105 Figure 12.5 Flow cytometric analysis and sorting of CD133expressing neural progenitor cells and terminally differentiated EpiG12f05 neurons from differentiating hESCs. (a) Multipotent neural progenitors express the surface antigen CD133, whereas terminally differentiated neurons arising from the progenitors express β-III-tubulin. This allows the use of flow cytometry to separate neural progenitors from other cell types produced during hESC differentiation and to isolate relatively pure populations of mature neurons. The diagrams in (a) are the outputs from a flow cytometer in which each of the dots on the plotted data represents a single cell expressing the CD133 Epigenetics_Chapter_12.indd 176 protein on its surface. This expression is detected by a fluorescent antibody that binds specifically to CD133. CD133-expressing cells are represented by blue dots. The flow cytometer can recognize the cells and direct them into a different container to the other non-CD133expressing cells. The histogram shows how the cytometer can detect β-III-tubulin-expressing neurons, which may be sorted in the same way as the CD133-expressing cells. (b) Immunostaining of hESC-derived neurons to confirm the presence of β-III-tubulin. [From Golebiewska A, Atkinson SP, Lako M, Armstrong L (2009) Stem Cells 27, 1298. With permission from John Wiley and Sons.] 01/11/2013 14:46 CHROMATIN PROFILE OF HEMATOPOIETIC PROGENITORS 177 expectations, the neural progenitors did not display H3K4me3 at the pluripotency-associated gene promoters, which correlates with the much lower expression levels of genes associated with pluripotency in these cells; however, significant levels of H3K4me2 were still detected at the pluripotency-associated gene promoters in cells expressing CD133 and β-III-tubulin, in keeping with the possible need for rapid up-regulation of these genes. Most of the genes specific to the neural lineage have bivalent chromatin domains at their promoters in the undifferentiated ESCs, and these show the expected resolution on differentiation into the neural progenitor cells. This causes some loss of the repressive H3K27me3 modification, with retention of the activating H3K4me3 mark. Markers of other lineages, such as GATA4 (which is expressed by cells found in the mesoderm and endoderm), lost H3K4me3 and displayed increased levels of H3K27me3 (which correlates with their lower expression during neurogenesis), but surprisingly the resolution does not seem to be absolute because at least some level of both types of histone modifications seemed to be retained for some of the bivalent genes after differentiation. This was unexpected for genes that are not likely to require expression in cells that differentiate from the neural progenitors, so it is currently unknown why bivalent domains are needed. It is possible that the functionality of a bivalent domain depends on relative levels of the two histone modifications, but this has not yet been determined with any certainty. However, it is interesting that H3K9 methylation levels also increase at the apparently retained bivalent promoters. Perhaps this is related to the suppression of gene expression at these loci, which would make the nature of bivalent domains rather different in pluripotent cells than in the multipotent progenitors (such as neural stem cells) that derive from them. 12.5 CHROMATIN PROFILE OF HEMATOPOIETIC PROGENITORS Neural stem cells are not unique in having lineage-specific genes that are required for differentiating into multiple cell types further down the differentiation pathway. Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are multi potent cells that at the single-cell level have the potential to differentiate into all cells of the erythromyeloid and lymphoid lineages, as well as to maintain their numbers by means of controlled self-renewal. In short, they are responsible for the lifelong regeneration of the blood and immune systems. Progression from HSCs to their differentiated progeny involves the coordinated regulation of multiple gene expression programs that lead to the activation or repression of lineage-specific genes. At the single-cell level in HSCs, low-level transcription of lineage-affiliated genes has been observed, a phenomenon known as lineage priming. It is possible that a specific chromatin structure exists at lineage-affiliated genes in HSCs that mediates low-level expression for the propagation of transcriptional memory during the differentiation process. As in the neural progenitors, it is apparent that H3K4 dimethylation marks the genes that need to be kept in a “poised” state for rapid up-regulation when HSC differentiation takes place. Because multiple fate decisions are possible, many different genes must be maintained in this state. An excellent example of this is the mouse γ5–VpreB1 locus. Transcription of the VpreB1 and γ5 genes in mice is activated during the pre-B-cell stage, before the heavy-chain rearrangement that is central to the immune function of the B cells that are eventually produced. The γ5-VpreB1 domain is already marked by histone H3 acetylation and Epigenetics_Chapter_12.indd 177 01/11/2013 14:46 178 Chapter 12: EPIGENETIC CONTROL OF CELLULAR DIFFERENTIATION histone H3K4 methylation at a discrete site in ES cells; these modifications are not present in the rest of the locus. The marked region expands in early B-cell progenitors and becomes a localized center for the recruitment of transcription factors and RNA polymerase II, but it disappears in mature B cells and is not present in cells of other lineages such as liver. This is a rather extreme example because other elements of this type have not been discovered, but it demonstrates the general principle that lineage-specific genes may have regions of H3K4 methylation that prevent them from being incorporated into heterochromatin while not actually having sufficient activation capacity to increase expression probability beyond a threshold level. In any case, gene up-regulation probably needs the activity of a specific transcription factor, but at least the promoter is more likely to be accessible when required. There is also evidence that differential levels of H3K4 dimethylation and trimethylation mark developmentally poised hematopoietic genes. Multipotent hematopoietic cells have a subset of genes that are differentially methylated (H3K4me2+/me3–). These genes are transcriptionally silent, lineage-specific hematopoietic genes that are uniquely susceptible to differentiation-induced H3K4 demethylation in developmental pathways other than that of the hematopoietic system. Many of the genes are not formally recognized as having bivalent chromatin domains in ESCs. These examples suggest that formal recognition of the presence of bivalent chromatin domains within a gene locus does not mean that gene is not able to undergo up-regulation of expression at some point during differentiation of a progenitor cell. It merely suggests that bivalency is one mechanism by which some genes can be held in a “poised” state that permits rapid expression when such genes are needed. The alternative mechanisms controlling the spatio-temporal expression of genes without bivalent chromatin domains remain to be fully elucidated. We have attempted to introduce the basic concepts behind the cellular differentiation that permits development of the embryo, but this discussion is far from exhaustive. More detailed information can be obtained from the references given in the Further Reading section below. KEY CONCEPTS • Embryonic development begins with a totipotent cell produced by the fusion of sperm and oocyte during fertilization. • The resulting “zygote” is called totipotent because it can differentiate into any of the cell types found in the developing embryo. • Changes in gene expression patterns both cause and result from the differentiation of totipotent cells, and this is mostly controlled by epigenetic modifications. • Embryonic stem cell differentiation can be used to model the processes of cellular differentiation occurring in the embryo. Epigenetics_Chapter_12.indd 178 01/11/2013 14:46 FURTHER READING 179 FURTHER READING Atkinson S & Armstrong L (2008) Epigenetics in embryonic stem cells: regulation of pluripotency and differentiation. Cell Tissue Res 331:23–29. Barrero MJ & Izpisua Belmonte JC (2012) Epigenetic mechanisms controlling mesodermal specification. In StemBook [Internet]. Cambridge (MA): Harvard Stem Cell Institute. http://www.ncbi. nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK133266/ Menendez P, Wang L & Bhatia M (2005) Genetic manipulation of human embryonic stem cells: a system to study early human development and potential therapeutic applications. Curr Gene Ther 5:375–385. Mitalipov S & Wolf D (2009) Totipotency, pluripotency and nuclear reprogramming. Adv Biochem Eng Biotechnol 114:185–199 (doi:10.1007/10_2008_45). Bibikova M, Laurent LC, Ren B et al. (2008) Unraveling epigenetic regulation in embryonic stem cells. Cell Stem Cell 2:123–134 (doi:10.1016/j.stem.2008.01.005). Oswald J, Engemann S, Lane N et al. (2000) Active demethylation of the paternal genome in the mouse zygote. Curr Biol 10:475–478. Bogliotti YS & Ross PJ (2012) Mechanisms of histone H3 lysine 27 trimethylation remodeling during early mammalian development. Epigenetics 7:976–981. Ruzov A, Tsenkina Y, Serio A et al. (2011) Lineage-specific distribution of high levels of genomic 5-hydroxymethylcytosine in mammalian development. Cell Res 21:1332–1342 (doi:10.1038/ cr.2011.113). Calvanese V & Fraga MF (2012) Epigenetics of embryonic stem cells. Adv Exp Med Biol 741:231–253 (doi: 10.1007/978-1-4614-2098-9_16). Han YM, Kim SH & Kang YK (2006) Analysis of DNA methylation profiles in preimplantation embryos using bisulfite mutagenesis. Methods Mol Biol 325:251–260. Hattori N & Shiota K (2008) Epigenetics: the study of embryonic stem cells by restriction landmark genomic scanning. FEBS J 275:1624–1630 (doi:10.1111/j.1742-4658.2008.06331.x). Khavari DA, Sen GL & Rinn JL (2010) DNA methylation and epigenetic control of cellular differentiation. Cell Cycle 9:3880–3883 (doi:10.4161/cc.9.19.13385). Li M, Liu GH & Izpisua Belmonte JC (2012) Navigating the epigenetic landscape of pluripotent stem cells. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 13:524–535 (doi:10.1038/nrm3393). Liu H, Kim JM & Aoki F (2004) Regulation of histone H3 lysine 9 methylation in oocytes and early pre-implantation embryos. Development 131:2269–2280. Lund RJ, Närvä E & Lahesmaa R (2012) Genetic and epigenetic stability of human pluripotent stem cells. Nat Rev Genet 13:732– 744 (doi:10.1038/nrg3271) Maroof AM, Keros S, Tyson JA et al. (2013) Directed differentiation and functional maturation of cortical interneurons from human embryonic stem cells. Cell Stem Cell 12:559–572 (doi:10.1016/j. stem.2013.04.008). Melcer S & Meshorer E (2010) Chromatin plasticity in pluripotent cells. Essays Biochem 48:245–62 (doi:10.1042/bse0480245). Epigenetics_Chapter_12.indd 179 Senner CE, Krueger F, Oxley D, et al. (2012) DNA methylation profiles define stem cell identity and reveal a tight embryonicextraembryonic lineage boundary. Stem Cells 30:2732–2745 (doi:10.1002/stem.1249). Smith A (2005) The battlefield of pluripotency. Cell 123:757–760 (doi:10.1016/j.cell.2005.11.012). Song J, Saha S, Gokulrangan G et al. (2012) DNA and chromatin modification networks distinguish stem cell pluripotent ground states. Mol Cell Proteomics 11:1036–1047. Torres-Padilla ME (2008) Cell identity in the preimplantation mammalian embryo: an epigenetic perspective from the mouse. Hum Reprod 23:1246–1252 (doi:10.1093/humrep/dem434). van Heesbeen HJ, Mesman S, Veenvliet JV & Smidt MP (2013) Epigenetic mechanisms in the development and maintenance of dopaminergic neurons. Development 140:1159-1169 (doi:10.1242/dev.089359). Wang J, Hevi S, Kurash JK et al. (2009) The lysine demethylase LSD1 (KDM1) is required for maintenance of global DNA methylation. Nat Genet 41:125–129 (doi:10.1038/ng.268). Wen B, Wu H, Shinkai Y et al. (2009) Large histone H3 lysine 9 dimethylated chromatin blocks distinguish differentiated from embryonic stem cells. Nat Genet 41:246–250 (doi: 10.1038/ ng.297). Yamagata K (2008) Capturing epigenetic dynamics during preimplantation development using live cell imaging. J Biochem 143:279–286 (doi:10.1093/jb/mvn001). 01/11/2013 14:46 Epigenetics_Chapter_12.indd 180 01/11/2013 14:46