- Zhang, Yunfang;
- Zhang, Xudong;
- Shi, Junchao;
- Tuorto, Francesca;
- Li, Xin;
- Liu, Yusheng;
- Liebers, Reinhard;
- Zhang, Liwen;
- Qu, Yongcun;
- Qian, Jingjing;
- Pahima, Maya;
- Liu, Ying;
- Yan, Menghong;
- Cao, Zhonghong;
- Lei, Xiaohua;
- Cao, Yujing;
- Peng, Hongying;
- Liu, Shichao;
- Wang, Yue;
- Zheng, Huili;
- Woolsey, Rebekah;
- Quilici, David;
- Zhai, Qiwei;
- Li, Lei;
- Zhou, Tong;
- Yan, Wei;
- Lyko, Frank;
- Zhang, Ying;
- Zhou, Qi;
- Duan, Enkui;
- Chen, Qi
The discovery of RNAs (for example, messenger RNAs, non-coding RNAs) in sperm has opened the possibility that sperm may function by delivering additional paternal information aside from solely providing the DNA 1 . Increasing evidence now suggests that sperm small non-coding RNAs (sncRNAs) can mediate intergenerational transmission of paternally acquired phenotypes, including mental stress2,3 and metabolic disorders4-6. How sperm sncRNAs encode paternal information remains unclear, but the mechanism may involve RNA modifications. Here we show that deletion of a mouse tRNA methyltransferase, DNMT2, abolished sperm sncRNA-mediated transmission of high-fat-diet-induced metabolic disorders to offspring. Dnmt2 deletion prevented the elevation of RNA modifications (m5C, m2G) in sperm 30-40 nt RNA fractions that are induced by a high-fat diet. Also, Dnmt2 deletion altered the sperm small RNA expression profile, including levels of tRNA-derived small RNAs and rRNA-derived small RNAs, which might be essential in composing a sperm RNA 'coding signature' that is needed for paternal epigenetic memory. Finally, we show that Dnmt2-mediated m5C contributes to the secondary structure and biological properties of sncRNAs, implicating sperm RNA modifications as an additional layer of paternal hereditary information.