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1.
Dnmt1 is responsible for the maintenance DNA methylation during replication to propagate methylation patterns to the next generation. The replication foci targeting sequence (RFTS), which plugs the catalytic pocket, is necessary for recruitment of Dnmt1 to the replication site. In the present study we found that the DNA methylation activity of Dnmt1 was DNA length-dependent and scarcely methylated 12-bp short hemi-methylated DNA. Contrarily, the RFTS-deleted Dnmt1 and Dnmt1 mutants that destroyed the hydrogen bonds between the RFTS and catalytic domain showed significant DNA methylation activity even toward 12-bp hemi-methylated DNA. The DNA methylation activity of the RFTS-deleted Dnmt1 toward 12-bp hemi-methylated DNA was strongly inhibited on the addition of RFTS, but to a lesser extent by Dnmt1 harboring the mutations that impair the hydrogen bond formation. The SRA domain of Uhrf1, which is a prerequisite factor for maintenance methylation and selectively binds to hemi-methylated DNA, stimulated the DNA methylation activity of Dnmt1. The SRA to Dnmt1 concentration ratio was the determinant for the maximum stimulation. In addition, a mutant SRA, which had lost the DNA binding activity but was able to bind to Dnmt1, stimulated the DNA methylation activity of Dnmt1. The results indicate that the DNA methylation activity of Dnmt1 was stimulated on the direct interaction of the SRA and Dnmt1. The SRA facilitated acceptance of the 12-bp fluorocytosine-containing DNA by the catalytic center. We propose that the SRA removes the RFTS plug from the catalytic pocket to facilitate DNA acceptance by the catalytic center.  相似文献   

2.
3.
DNA methylation patterns in genome are maintained during replication by a DNA methyltransferase Dnmt1. Mouse Dnmt1 is a 180 kDa protein comprising the N-terminal regulatory domain, which covers 2/3 of the molecule, and the rest C-terminal catalytic domain. In the present study, we demonstrated that the limited digestion of full-length Dnmt1 with different proteases produced a common N-terminal fragment, which migrated along with Dnmt1 (1-248) in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Digestion of the N-terminal domains larger than Dnmt1 (1-248) with chymotrypsin again produced the fragment identical to the size of Dnmt1 (1-248). These results indicate that the N-terminal domain of 1-248 forms an independent domain. This N-terminal domain showed DNA binding activity, and the responsible sequence was narrowed to the 79 amino acid residues involving the proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) binding motif. The DNA binding activity did not distinguish between DNA methylated and non-methylated states, but preferred to bind to the minor groove of AT-rich sequence. The DNA binding activity of the N-terminal domain competed with the PCNA binding. We propose that DNA binding activity of the N-terminal domain contributes to the localization of Dnmt1 to AT-rich sequence such as Line 1, satellite, and the promoter of tissue-specific silent genes.  相似文献   

4.
Dnmt3L has been identified as a stimulator of the catalytic activity of de novo DNA methyltransferases. It is essential in the development of germ cells in mammals. We show here that Dnmt3L stimulates the catalytic activity of the Dnmt3A and Dnmt3B enzymes by directly binding to their respective catalytic domains via its own C-terminal domain. The catalytic activity of Dnmt3A and -3B was stimulated approximately 15-fold, and Dnmt3L directly binds to DNA but not to S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet). Complex formation between Dnmt3A and Dnmt3L accelerates DNA binding by Dnmt3A 20-fold and lowers its K(m) for DNA. Interaction of Dnmt3L with Dnmt3A increases the binding of the coenzyme AdoMet to Dnmt3A, and it lowers the K(m) of Dnmt3A for AdoMet. On the basis of our data we propose a model in which the interaction of Dnmt3A with Dnmt3L induces a conformational change of Dnmt3A that opens the active site of the enzyme and promotes binding of DNA and the AdoMet. We demonstrate that the interaction of Dnmt3A and Dnmt3L is transient, and after DNA binding to Dnmt3A, Dnmt3L dissociates from the complex. Following dissociation of Dnmt3L, Dnmt3A adopts a closed conformation leading to slow rates of DNA release. Therefore, Dnmt3L acts as a substrate exchange factor that accelerates DNA and AdoMet binding to de novo DNA methyltransferases.  相似文献   

5.
The mammalian DNA methyltransferase Dnmt1 is responsible for the maintenance of the pattern of DNA methylation in vivo. It is a large multidomain enzyme comprising 1620 amino acid residues. We have purified and characterized individual domains of Dnmt1 (NLS-containing domain, NlsD, amino acid residues: 1-343; replication foci-directing domain, 350-609; Zn-binding domain (ZnD), 613-748; polybromo domain, 746-1110; and the catalytic domain (CatD), 1124-1620). CatD, ZnD and NlsD bind to DNA, demonstrating the existence of three independent DNA-binding sites in Dnmt1. CatD shows a preference for binding to hemimethylated CpG-sites; ZnD prefers methylated CpGs; and NlsD specifically binds to CpG-sites, but does not discriminate between unmethylated and methylated DNA. These results are not compatible with the suggestion that the target recognition domain of Dnmt1 resides in the N terminus of the enzyme. We show by protein-protein interaction assays that ZnD and CatD interact with each other. The isolated catalytic domain does not methylate DNA, neither alone nor in combination with other domains. Full-length Dnmt1 was purified from baculovirus-infected insect cells. Under the experimental conditions, Dnmt1 has a strong (50-fold) preference for hemimethylated DNA. Dnmt1 is stimulated to methylate unmodified CpG sites by the addition of fully methylated DNA. This effect is dependent on Zn, suggesting that binding of methylated DNA to ZnD triggers the allosteric activation of the catalytic center of Dnmt1. The allosteric activation model can explain kinetic data obtained by others. It suggests that Dnmt1 might be responsible for spreading of methylation, a process that is observed during aging and carcenogenesis but may be important for de novo methylation of DNA.  相似文献   

6.
Several mammalian proteins involved in chromatin and DNA modification contain CXXC zinc finger domains. We compared the structure and function of the CXXC domains in the DNA methyltransferase Dnmt1 and the methylcytosine dioxygenase Tet1. Sequence alignment showed that both CXXC domains have a very similar framework but differ in the central tip region. Based on the known structure of a similar MLL1 domain we developed homology models and designed expression constructs for the isolated CXXC domains of Dnmt1 and Tet1 accordingly. We show that the CXXC domain of Tet1 has no DNA binding activity and is dispensable for catalytic activity in vivo. In contrast, the CXXC domain of Dnmt1 selectively binds DNA substrates containing unmethylated CpG sites. Surprisingly, a Dnmt1 mutant construct lacking the CXXC domain formed covalent complexes with cytosine bases both in vitro and in vivo and rescued DNA methylation patterns in dnmt1−/− embryonic stem cells (ESCs) just as efficiently as wild type Dnmt1. Interestingly, neither wild type nor ΔCXXC Dnmt1 re-methylated imprinted CpG sites of the H19a promoter in dnmt1−/− ESCs, arguing against a role of the CXXC domain in restraining Dnmt1 methyltransferase activity on unmethylated CpG sites.  相似文献   

7.
《Epigenetics》2013,8(3):155-160
DNA methyltransferase 1 methylates hemi-methylated CpG sites generated during DNA replication. Serine 515 of this enzyme has been shown to be phosphorylated. To explore the importance of S515 phosphorylation, we generated mutants of Dnmt1 which removed the phosphorylation potential (S515A) or mimic phosphoserine (S515E), purified the proteins from insect cells and analyzed their DNA methylation activity in vitro. The S515E mutant was found to be active, while S515A mutant had severe loss in activity when compared to the wild type protein. The loss of activity of the S515A variant was not due to loss of DNA binding capacity. Furthermore, we show that a phosphorylated peptide whose sequence mimics the surrounding of Ser515 (EKIYISPKIVVE) inhibited the activity of wild type Dnmt1 10-fold more than the non-phosphorylated peptide. The inhibition was specific for Dnmt1 and for the particular peptide sequence. Our data suggest that phosphorylation Ser515 is important for an interaction between the N-terminal domain of Dnmt1 and its catalytic domain that is necessary for activity and that this interaction is specifically disrupted by the phosphorylated peptide. We conclude that phosphorylation of Dnmt1 at Ser515 could be an important regulator of Dnmt1 activity during cell cycle and after proliferative stimuli.  相似文献   

8.
Site-specific hypermethylation of tumor suppressor genes accompanied by genome-wide hypomethylation are epigenetic hallmarks of malignancy. However, the molecular mechanisms that drive these linked changes in DNA methylation remain obscure. DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1), the principle enzyme responsible for maintaining methylation patterns is commonly dysregulated in tumors. Replication foci targeting sequence (RFTS) is an N-terminal domain of DNMT1 that inhibits DNA-binding and catalytic activity, suggesting that RFTS deletion would result in a gain of DNMT1 function. However, a substantial body of data suggested that RFTS is required for DNMT1 activity. Here, we demonstrate that deletion of RFTS alters DNMT1-dependent DNA methylation during malignant transformation. Compared to full-length DNMT1, ectopic expression of hyperactive DNMT1-ΔRFTS caused greater malignant transformation and enhanced promoter methylation with condensed chromatin structure that silenced DAPK and DUOX1 expression. Simultaneously, deletion of RFTS impaired DNMT1 chromatin association with pericentromeric Satellite 2 (SAT2) repeat sequences and produced DNA demethylation at SAT2 repeats and globally. To our knowledge, RFTS-deleted DNMT1 is the first single factor that can reprogram focal hypermethylation and global hypomethylation in parallel during malignant transformation. Our evidence suggests that the RFTS domain of DNMT1 is a target responsible for epigenetic changes in cancer.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Dnmt1 is the predominant DNA methyltransferase (MTase) in mammals. The C-terminal domain of Dnmt1 clearly shares sequence similarity with many prokaryotic 5mC methyltransferases, and had been proposed to be sufficient for catalytic activity. We show here by deletion analysis that the C-terminal domain alone is not sufficient for methylating activity, but that a large part of the N-terminal domain is required in addition. Since this complex structure of Dnmt1 raises issues about its evolutionary origin, we have compared several eukaryotic MTases and have determined the genomic organization of the mouse Dnmt1 gene. The 5' most part of the N-terminal domain is dispensible for enzyme activity, includes the major nuclear import signal and comprises tissue-specific exons. Interestingly, the functional subdivision of Dnmt1 correlates well with the structure of the Dnmt1 gene in terms of intron/exon size distribution as well as sequence conservation. Our results, based on functional, structural and sequence comparison data, suggest that the gene has evolved from the fusion of at least three genes.  相似文献   

11.
Using peptide arrays and binding to native histone proteins, we show that the ADD domain of Dnmt3a specifically interacts with the H3 histone 1–19 tail. Binding is disrupted by di- and trimethylation of K4, phosphorylation of T3, S10 or T11 and acetylation of K4. We did not observe binding to the H4 1–19 tail. The ADD domain of Dnmt3b shows the same binding specificity, suggesting that the distinct biological functions of both enzymes are not related to their ADD domains. To establish a functional role of the ADD domain binding to unmodified H3 tails, we analyzed the DNA methylation of in vitro reconstituted chromatin with Dnmt3a2, the Dnmt3a2/Dnmt3L complex, and the catalytic domain of Dnmt3a. All Dnmt3a complexes preferentially methylated linker DNA regions. Chromatin substrates with unmodified H3 tail or with H3K9me3 modification were methylated more efficiently by full-length Dnmt3a and full-length Dnmt3a/3L complexes than chromatin trimethylated at H3K4. In contrast, the catalytic domain of Dnmt3a was not affected by the H3K4me3 modification. These results demonstrate that the binding of the ADD domain to H3 tails unmethylated at K4 leads to the preferential methylation of DNA bound to chromatin with this modification state. Our in vitro results recapitulate DNA methylation patterns observed in genome-wide DNA methylation studies.  相似文献   

12.
The preference of murine DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferase (Dnmt1) for single stranded DNA substrates is increased up to 50-fold by the presence of a proximal 5-methyl cytosine (5(me)C). This modulation is distance-dependent and is due to an enhanced binding affinity and minor changes in catalytic efficiency. No modulation was observed with double stranded DNA. Modulation requires that the 5(me)C moiety be attached to the DNA strand containing the CpG methylation target. Our results support a model in which 5(me)C binding by the enzyme occurs to at least one site outside the region involved in CpG recognition. No modulation in response to 5(me)C is observed with the bacterial enzyme M.SssI, which lacks the large N-terminal regulatory domain found in Dnmt1. We suggest that this allosteric modulation involves the N-terminal domain of Dnmt1.  相似文献   

13.
The C-terminal domains of the mammalian DNA methyltransferases Dnmt1, Dnmt3a, and Dnmt3b harbor all the conserved motifs characteristic for cytosine-C5 methyltransferases. Whereas the isolated catalytic domain of Dnmt1 is inactive, we show here that the C-terminal domains of Dnmt3a and Dnmt3b are catalytically active. Neither Dnmt3a nor Dnmt3b shows a significant preference for the satellite 2 sequence, although Dnmt3b is required for methylation of these regions in vivo. However, the catalytic domain of Dnmt3a methylates DNA in a distributive reaction, whereas Dnmt3b is processive, which accelerates methylation of macromolecular DNA in vitro. This property could make Dnmt3b a preferred enzyme for methylation at satellite 2 repeats, since they are highly CG-rich. We have also analyzed the catalytic activities of six different mutations found in ICF (immunodeficiency, centromeric instability, and facial abnormalities) patients in the catalytic domain of Dnmt3b. Five of them display catalytic activities reduced by 10-50-fold; one mutant was inactive in our assay (residual activity <1%). These results confirm that a reduced catalytic activity of Dnm3b causes ICF. However, the mutations in general do not completely abrogate catalytic activity. This finding may explain why ICF patients are viable, whereas nmt3b knock-out mice die during embryogenesis.  相似文献   

14.
Methylation of cytosine residues in CpG dinucleotides plays an important role in epigenetic regulation of gene expression and chromatin structure/stability in higher eukaryotes. DNA methylation patterns are established and maintained at CpG dinucleotides by DNA methyltransferases (Dnmt1, Dnmt3a, and Dnmt3b). In mammals and many other eukaryotes, the CpG dinucleotide is underrepresented in the genome. This loss is postulated to be the result of unrepaired deamination of cytosine and 5-methylcytosine to uracil and thymine, respectively. Two thymine glycosylases are believed to reduce the impact of 5-methylcytosine deamination. G/T mismatch-specific thymine-DNA glycosylase (Tdg) and methyl-CpG binding domain protein 4 can both excise uracil or thymine at U·G and T·G mismatches to initiate base excision repair. Here, we report the characterization of interactions between Dnmt3b and both Tdg and methyl-CpG binding domain protein 4. Our results demonstrate (1) that both Tdg and Dnmt3b are colocalized to heterochromatin and (2) reduction of T·G mismatch repair efficiency upon loss of DNA methyltransferase expression, as well as a requirement for an RNA component for correct T·G mismatch repair.  相似文献   

15.
The catalytic domain of Dnmt3a cooperatively multimerizes on DNA forming nucleoprotein filaments. Based on modeling, we identified the interface of Dnmt3a complexes binding next to each other on the DNA and disrupted it by charge reversal of critical residues. This prevented cooperative DNA binding and multimerization of Dnmt3a on the DNA, as shown by the loss of cooperative complex formation in electrophoretic mobility shift assay, the loss of cooperativity in DNA binding in solution, the loss of a characteristic 8- to 10-bp periodicity in DNA methylation and direct imaging of protein-DNA complexes by scanning force microscopy. Non-cooperative Dnmt3a-C variants bound DNA well and retained methylation activity, indicating that cooperative DNA binding and multimerization of Dnmt3a on the DNA are not required for activity. However, one non-cooperative variant showed reduced heterochromatic localization in mammalian cells. We propose two roles of Dnmt3a cooperative DNA binding in the cell: (i) either nucleofilament formation could be required for periodic DNA methylation or (ii) favorable interactions between Dnmt3a complexes may be needed for the tight packing of Dnmt3a at heterochromatic regions. The complex interface optimized for tight packing would then promote the cooperative binding of Dnmt3a to naked DNA in vitro.  相似文献   

16.
DNA methylation is a major epigenetic modification and plays a crucial role in the regulation of gene expression. Within the family of DNA methyltransferases (Dnmts), Dnmt3a and 3b establish methylation marks during early development, while Dnmt1 maintains methylation patterns after DNA replication. The maintenance function of Dnmt1 is regulated by its large regulatory N‐terminal domain that interacts with other chromatin factors and is essential for the recognition of hemi‐methylated DNA. Gelfiltration analysis showed that purified Dnmt1 elutes at an apparent molecular weight corresponding to the size of a dimer. With protein interaction assays we could show that Dnmt1 interacts with itself through its N‐terminal regulatory domain. By deletion analysis and co‐immunoprecipitations we mapped the dimerization domain to the targeting sequence TS that is located in the center of the N‐terminal domain (amino acids 310–629) and was previously shown to mediate replication independent association with heterochromatin at chromocenters. Further mutational analyses suggested that the dimeric complex has a bipartite interaction interface and is formed in a head‐to‐head orientation. Dnmt1 dimer formation could facilitate the discrimination of hemi‐methylated target sites as has been found for other palindromic DNA sequence recognizing enzymes. These results assign an additional function to the TS domain and raise the interesting question how these functions are spatially and temporarily co‐ordinated. J. Cell. Biochem. 106: 521–528, 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
The PWWP domain is a weakly conserved sequence motif found in > 60 eukaryotic proteins, including the mammalian DNA methyltransferases Dnmt3a and Dnmt3b. These proteins often contain other chromatin-association domains. A 135-residue PWWP domain from mouse Dnmt3b (amino acids 223--357) has been structurally characterized at 1.8 A resolution. The N-terminal half of this domain resembles a barrel-like five-stranded structure, whereas the C-terminal half contains a five-helix bundle. The two halves are packed against each other to form a single structural module that exhibits a prominent positive electrostatic potential. The PWWP domain alone binds DNA in vitro, probably through its basic surface. We also show that recombinant Dnmt3b2 protein (a splice variant of Dnmt3b) and two N-terminal deletion mutants (Delta218 and Delta369) have approximately equal methyl transfer activity on unmethylated and hemimethylated CpG-containing oligonucleotides. The Delta218 protein, which includes the PWWP domain, binds DNA more strongly than Delta369, which lacks the PWWP domain.  相似文献   

18.
In mammals, DNA methylation is crucial for embryonic development and germ cell differentiation. The DNA methylation patterns are created by de novo-type DNA methyltransferases (Dnmts) 3a and 3b. Dnmt3a is crucial for global methylation, including that of imprinted genes in germ cells. In eukaryotic nuclei, genomic DNA is packaged into multinucleosomes with linker histone H1, which binds to core nucleosomes, simultaneously making contacts in the linker DNA that separates adjacent nucleosomes. In the present study, we prepared oligonucleosomes from HeLa nuclei with or without linker histone H1 and used them as a substrate for Dnmt3a. Removal of histone H1 enhanced the DNA methylation activity. Furthermore, Dnmt3a preferentially methylated the linker between the two nucleosome core regions of reconstituted dinucleosomes, and the binding of histone H1 inhibited the DNA methylation activity of Dnmt3a towards the linker DNA. Since an identical amount of histone H1 did not inhibit the activity towards naked DNA, the inhibitory effect of histone H1 was not on the Dnmt3a catalytic activity but on its preferential location in the linker DNA of the dinucleosomes. The central globular domain and C-terminal tail of the histone H1 molecule were indispensable for inhibition of the DNA methylation activity of Dnmt3a. We propose that the binding and release of histone H1 from the linker portion of chromatin may regulate the local DNA methylation of the genome by Dnmt3a, which is expressed ubiquitously in somatic cells in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
DNA methylation patterns of mammalian genomes are generated in gametogenesis and early embryonic development. Two de novo DNA methyltransferases, Dnmt3a and Dnmt3b, are responsible for the process. Both enzymes contain a long N-terminal regulatory region linked to a conserved C-terminal domain responsible for the catalytic activity. Although a PWWP domain in the N-terminal region has been shown to bind DNA in vitro, it is unclear how the DNA methyltransferases access their substrate in chromatin in vivo. We show here that the two proteins are associated with chromatin including mitotic chromosomes in mammalian cells, and the PWWP domain is essential for the chromatin targeting of the enzymes. The functional significance of PWWP-mediated chromatin targeting is suggested by the fact that a missense mutation in this domain of human DNMT3B causes immunodeficiency, centromeric heterochromatin instability, facial anomalies (ICF) syndrome, which is characterized by loss of methylation in satellite DNA, pericentromeric instability, and immunodeficiency. We demonstrate that the mutant protein completely loses its chromatin targeting capacity. Our data establish the PWWP domain as a novel chromatin/chromosome-targeting module and suggest that the PWWP-mediated chromatin association is essential for the function of the de novo methyltransferases during development.  相似文献   

20.
Mouse DNA (cytosine-5) methyltransferases Dnmt3a and Dnmt3b are expected to be de novo-type DNA methyltransferases. In the present study, we found that exogenously expressed mouse Dnmt3a or Dnmt3b induced abnormal cell clusters at the gastrulation stage in Xenopus embryos. The abnormal cells were judged to be apoptotic from the positive staining with the TdT dUTP nucleotide end-labeling method and the rescue by hBcl-x(L), a Bcl-2 homologue. On the other hand, neither bacterial DNA (cytosine-5) methyltransferase nor Dnmt3b3, one of the three isoforms of Dnmt3b that has no DNA methylation activity, induced apoptosis. In addition, mutant Dnmt3a and the other two Dnmt3b isoforms, Dnmt3b1 and Dnmt3b2, which have no DNA methylation activity due to a change of the cysteine residue in the catalytic center to an alanine residue, retained the ability to induce apoptosis. This indicates that the apoptosis was not induced by DNA methylation activity. The domain of Dnmt3b1 (3b2) responsible for the apoptosis is the catalytic domain in the carboxyl-terminal half.  相似文献   

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