Dynamic DNA methylation: a prime candidate for genomic metaplasticity and behavioral adaptation
- PMID: 23041052
- DOI: 10.1016/j.tins.2012.09.003
Dynamic DNA methylation: a prime candidate for genomic metaplasticity and behavioral adaptation
Abstract
DNA methylation was once considered to be a static epigenetic modification whose primary function was restricted to directing the development of cellular phenotype. However, it is now evident that the methylome is dynamically regulated across the lifespan: during development as a putative mechanism by which early experience leaves a lasting signature on the genome and during adulthood as a function of behavioral adaptation. Here, we propose that experience-dependent variations in DNA methylation, particularly within the context of learning and memory, represent a form of genomic metaplasticity that serves to prime the transcriptional response to later learning-related stimuli and neuronal reactivation.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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