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1.
Methylation of DNA is important in many organisms and essential in mammals. Nucleobases can be methylated at the adenine-N6, cytosine-N4, or cytosine-C5 atoms by specific DNA methyltransferases. We show here that the M.EcoRV, M.EcoRI, and Escherichia coli dam methyltransferases as well as the N- and C-terminal domains of the M. FokI enzyme, which were formerly all classified as adenine-N6 DNA methyltransferases, also methylate cytosine residues at position N4. Kinetic analyses demonstrate that the rate of methylation of cytosine residues by M.EcoRV and the M.FokI enzymes is reduced by only 1-2 orders of magnitude in relation to methylation of adenines. This result shows that although these enzymes methylate DNA in a sequence specific manner, they have a low substrate specificity with respect to the target base. This unexpected finding has implications on the mechanism of adenine-N6 DNA methyltransferases. Sequence comparisons suggest that adenine-N6 and cytosine-N4 methyltransferases have changed their reaction specificity at least twice during evolution, a model that becomes much more likely given the partial functional overlap of both enzyme types. In contrast, methylation of adenine residues by the cytosine-N4 methyltransferase M.BamHI was not detectable. On the basis of our results, we suggest that adenine-N6 and cytosine-N4 methyltransferases should be grouped into one enzyme family.  相似文献   

2.
DNA methylase from HeLa cell nuclei.   总被引:10,自引:10,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
A DNA methylase has been purified 270-fold from HeLa cell nuclei by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, phosphocellulose, and hydroxyapatite. The enzyme transfers methyl groups from S-adenosyl-L-methionine to cytosine residues in DNA. The sole product of the reaction has been identified as 5-methylcytosine. The enzyme is able to methylate homologous (HeLa) DNA, although to a lesser extent than heterologous DNA. This may be due to incomplete methylation of HeLa DNA synthesized in vivo. The HeLa enzyme can methylate single-stranded DNA, and does so to an extent three times greater than that of the corresponding double-stranded DNA. In single-stranded M. luteus DNA, at least 2.4% of the cytosine residues can be methylated in vitro by the enzyme. The enzyme also can methylate poly (dG-dC-dG-dC) and poly (dG, dC). Bilateral nearest neighbors to the 5-methylcytosine have been determined with M. luteus DNA in vitro and HeLa DNA in vivo. The 5' neighbor can be either G or C while the 3' neighbor is always G and this sequence is, thus, p(G/C)pmCpG.  相似文献   

3.
P Renbaum  A Razin 《FEBS letters》1992,313(3):243-247
The cytosine DNA methylase from the wall-less prokaryote, Spiroplasma strain MQ1 (M.SssI) methylates completely and exclusively CpG-containing sequences, thus showing sequence specificity which is similar to that of mammalian DNA methylases. M.SssI is shown here to methylate duplex DNA processively as judged by kinetic analysis of methylated intermediates. The cytosine DNA methylases, M.HpaII and M.HhaI, from other prokaryotic organisms, appear to methylate in a non-processive manner or with a very low degree of processivity. The Spiroplasma enzyme interacts with duplex DNA irrespective to the presence of CpG sequences in the substrate DNA. The enzyme proceeds along a CpG-containing DNA substrate molecule methylating one strand of DNA at a time.  相似文献   

4.
We have developed a simple new method that can identify the base methylated by a sequence-specific DNA methyltransferase and have used it to identify the cytosine that is methylated by DsaV methyltransferase (M. DsaV) within its recognition sequence 5'-CCNGG. The method utilizes the fact that exonuclease III of E. coli does not degrade DNA ends with 3' overhangs and cannot hydrolyze a phosphorothioate linkage. DNA duplexes containing phosphorothioate linkages at specific positions were methylated with M. DsaV in the presence of [methyl-3H] S-adenosylmethionine and were subjected to exonuclease III digestion. The pattern of [methyl-3H] dCMP release from the duplexes was consistent with the methylation of the internal cytosine in CCNGG, but not of the outer cytosine. To establish the accuracy of this method, we confirmed the known specificity of EcoRII methyltransferase by the method. We also confirmed the specificity of M. DsaV using an established biochemical method that involves the use of a type IIS restriction enzyme. Methylation of CCWGG (W = A or T) sequences at the internal cytosines is native to E. coli and is not restricted by the modified cytosine restriction (Mcr) systems. Surprisingly, the gene for M. DsaV was significantly restricted by the McrBC system. We interpret this to mean that M. DsaV may occasionally methylate at sequences other than CCNGG or may occasionally methylate the outer cytosine in its recognition sequence.  相似文献   

5.
Waclaw Szybalski 《Gene》1985,40(2-3):169-173
Class IIS restriction endonucleases cleave double-stranded (ds) DNA at precise distances from their recognition sequences. A method is proposed which utilizes this separation between the recognition site and the cut site to allow a class IIS enzyme, e.g., FokI, to cleave practically any predetermined sequence by combining the enzyme with a properly designed oligodeoxynucleotide adapter. Such an adapter is constructed from the constant recognition site domain (a hairpin containing the ds sequence, e.g., GGATG CCTAC for FokI) and a variable, single-stranded (ss) domain complementary to the ss sequence to be cleaved (at 9 and 13 nucleotides on the paired strands from the recognition sequence in the example of FokI). The ss sequence designated to be cleaved could be provided by ss phage DNA (e.g., M13), gapped ds plasmids, or supercoiled ds plasmids that were alkali denatured and rapidly neutralized. Combination of all three components, namely the class IIS enzyme, the ss DNA target sequence, and the complementing adapter, would result in target DNA cleavage at the specific predetermined site. The target ss DNA could be converted to the precisely cleaved ds DNA by DNA polymerase, utilizing the adapter oligodeoxynucleotide as primer. This novel procedure represents the first example of changing enzyme specificity by synthetic design. A practically unlimited assortment of new restriction specificities could be produced. The method should have many specific and general applications when its numerous ramifications are exploited.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Type IIS restriction endonuclease BtsCI (GGATG 2/0) is a neoschizomer of FokI (GGATG 9/13) and cleaves closer to the recognition sequence. Although M.BtsCI shows 62% amino acid sequence identity to M.FokI, BtsCI and FokI restriction endonucleases do not share significant amino acid sequence similarity. BtsCI belongs to a group of Type IIS restriction endonucleases, BsmI, Mva1269I and BsrI, that carry two different catalytic sites in a single polypeptide. By inactivating one of the catalytic sites through mutagenesis, we have generated nicking variants of BtsCI that specifically nick the bottom-strand or the top-strand of the target site. By treating target DNA sequentially with the appropriate combinations of FokI and BtsCI nicking variants, we are able to generate long overhangs suitable for fluorescent labeling through end-filling or other techniques based on annealing of complementary DNA sequences.  相似文献   

8.
DNA methylase has been purified 660-fold from nuclei from regenerating rat liver. The enzyme is able to methylate single stranded (ss) and double stranded (ds) DNA, the only reaction product being 5-methylcytosine. Previously unmethylated double stranded DNA from prokaryotes (M.luteus) as well as from eukaryotes (Ascaris suis) can serve as substrates. The synthetic copolymers (dG-dC)n . (dC-dG)n and (dG,dC)n are also methylated. While SV40 DNA is almost not methylated, PM2 DNA is a good substrate even in the supercoiled form. The enzyme methylates 1 in 17 bases in heterologous M.luteus DNA, but only 1 in 590 in homologous rat liver DNA. The high methylation level of M.luteus DNA, an analysis of the methylated pyrimidine isostichs and a preliminary dinucleotide analysis suggest that all the CpGs in a DNA can be methylated.  相似文献   

9.
DNA fragments with the point amidophosphate (cyclohexylamido- or morpholido-) modification in the sugar-phosphate backbone were synthesized and separated into individual diastereoisomer. The isomers were separated by the reversed-phase HPLC (RPC), and chirality at phosphorus was assigned by a stereochemical correlation scheme using phosphorothioate standards. The RPC-retention time values for Rp-isomers were found to be lower than for Sp-analogues. Amidophosphate DNA fragments were used as P- and OH-components in the T4 DNA-ligation. The enzyme does not ligate amidated fragments with modified internucleotide linkage near 5'- or 3'-end, independently of the amidophosphate chirality. When an unmodified phosphodiester linkage separates the amidophosphate group from 3'-end in O-component, the ligation occurs only with Sp-isomer, whereas Rp-analogue does not give the ligation product. In the P-component of the ligation, configuration of the modified linkage separated from 5'-phosphate by an unmodified linkage does not affect the result of the enzymatic reaction: both Sp-and Rp-stereomers do take part in the ligation. As a result of the ligation of the modified fragments on unmodified templates a set of 31-mers was obtained. They contain FokI and EcoRI recognition sites with the cleavage points of both endonucleases coinciding and being amidated. Upon treatment of duplex DNA consisted of unmodified and amidated strands with these endonucleases Sp-configuration did not hinder the cleavage of the unmodified strand, whereas Rp-configuration inhibited the EcoRI and did not affect the FokI cleavage.  相似文献   

10.
Synthetic single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides of known sequence have been used as in vitro substrates for a partially purified HeLa cell DNA methylase. Although most oligonucleotides tested cannot be used by the HeLa DNA methylase in vitro, we have found a unique 27mer, containing 2 C-G pairs, that is an excellent substrate for the enzyme. Analysis of the methylation of the 27mer, its derivatives and other oligomer substrates reveal that the HeLa DNA methylase does not significantly methylate an oligomer which contains just one C-G pair. In addition, only one of the two C-G pairs in the 27mer is methylated and this methylation is abolished if the other C-G pair is converted to a C-A pair. Furthermore, the HeLa enzyme apparently cannot methylate C-G pairs located in compounds containing a high A + T content. The most efficient methylation occurs with multiple separated C-G pairs in a compound with a high G + C content (greater than 65%). The results suggest that clustering of C-G pairs in regions of the DNA high in G + C content may be the preferred site for DNA methylation in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
The M.FokI adenine-N(6) DNA methyltransferase recognizes the asymmetric DNA sequence GGATG/CATCC. It consists of two domains each containing all motifs characteristic for adenine-N(6) DNA methyltransferases. We have studied the specificity of DNA-methylation by both domains using 27 hemimethylated oligonucleotide substrates containing recognition sites which differ in one or two base pairs from GGATG or CATCC. The N-terminal domain of M.FokI interacts very specifically with GGATG-sequences, because only one of the altered sites is modified. In contrast, the C-terminal domain shows lower specificity. It prefers CATCC-sequences but only two of the 12 star sites (i.e. sites that differ in 1 bp from the recognition site) are not accepted and some star sites are modified with rates reduced only 2-3-fold. In addition, GGATGC- and CGATGC-sites are modified which differ at two positions from CATCC. DNA binding experiments show that the N-terminal domain preferentially binds to hemimethylated GGATG/C(m)ATCC sequences whereas the C-terminal domain binds to DNA with higher affinity but without specificity. Protein-protein interaction assays show that both domains of M.FokI are in contact with each other. However, several DNA-binding experiments demonstrate that DNA-binding of both domains is mutually exclusive in full-length M.FokI and both domains do not functionally influence each other. The implications of these results on the molecular evolution of type IIS restriction/modification systems are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The methyltransferase (MTase) in the DsaV restriction--modification system methylates within 5'-CCNGG sequences. We have cloned the gene for this MTase and determined its sequence. The predicted sequence of the MTase protein contains sequence motifs conserved among all cytosine-5 MTases and is most similar to other MTases that methylate CCNGG sequences, namely M.ScrFI and M.SsoII. All three MTases methylate the internal cytosine within their recognition sequence. The 'variable' region within the three enzymes that methylate CCNGG can be aligned with the sequences of two enzymes that methylate CCWGG sequences. Remarkably, two segments within this region contain significant similarity with the region of M.HhaI that is known to contact DNA bases. These alignments suggest that many cytosine-5 MTases are likely to interact with DNA using a similar structural framework.  相似文献   

13.
M13 DNAs in which carbon 5 of each deoxycytidine residue in one strand is replaced with a bulky group are very good substrates for human DNA (cytosine-5) methyltransferase. Rate enhancements of up to 35 fold are obtained depending on the size of the moiety at C-5. The enzyme appears optimally suited to sense a methyl group in one strand at this position. Alkaline density gradient analyses of the distribution of methyl groups applied to 5-BrdCyd or 5-IdCyd substituted DNA reveal that these groups serve to direct the enzyme to methylate the unsubstituted strand.  相似文献   

14.
EcoP1I methyltransferase (M.EcoP1I) belongs to the type III restriction-modification system encoded by prophage P1 that infects Escherichia coli. Binding of M.EcoP1I to double-stranded DNA and single-stranded DNA has been characterized. Binding to both single- and double-stranded DNA could be competed out by unlabeled single-stranded DNA. Metal ions did not influence DNA binding. Interestingly, M.EcoP1I was able to methylate single-stranded DNA. Kinetic parameters were determined for single- and double-stranded DNA methylation. This feature of the enzyme probably functions in protecting the phage genome from restriction by type III restriction enzymes and thus could be considered as an anti-restriction system. This study describing in vitro methylation of single-stranded DNA by the type III methyltransferase EcoP1I allows understanding of the mechanism of action of these enzymes and also their role in the biology of single-stranded phages.  相似文献   

15.
We developed a method for site-selective CpG methylation of the budding yeast genome. The method recruits LexA-fused M.SssI DNA methyltransferase to LexA operator sequences integrated adjacent to the target site. Microarray analysis of methylated DNAs indicated that the tethered enzyme selectively methylates the region around the target site. Exploiting this method to methylate bait DNA in the one-hybrid system, we demonstrated methylation-dependent DNA binding of methyl-CpG binding proteins, MBD1 and Kaiso, in vivo. This methylation-dependent one-hybrid system would provide a versatile tool for the search and analysis of proteins that recognize methylated DNA to participate in epigenetic regulation.  相似文献   

16.
The histone lysine methyltransferases catalyze the transfer of methyl groups from S-adenosylmethionine to specific epsilon-N-lysine residues in the N-terminal regions of histones H3 and H4. These enzymes are located exclusively within the nucleus and are firmly bound to chromatin. The chromosomal bound enzymes do not methylate free or nonspecifically associated histones, while histones H3 and H4 within newly synthesized chromatin are methylated. These enzymes can be solubilized by limited digestion (10-16%) of chromosomal DNA from rapidly proliferating rat brain chromatin with micrococcal nuclease. Histone H3 lysine methyltransferase remained associated with a short DNA fragment throughout purification. Dissociation of the enzyme from the DNA fragment with DNAase digestion resulted in complete loss of enzyme activity; however, when this enzyme remained associated with DNA it was quite stable. Activity of the dissociated enzyme could not be restored upon the addition of sheared calf thymus or Escherichia coli DNA. Histone H3 lysine methyltransferase was found to methylate lysine residues in chromosomal bound or soluble histone H3, while H3 associated with mature nucleosomes was not methylated. The histone H4 lysine methyltransferase which was detectable in the crude nuclease digest was extremely labile, losing all activity upon further purification. We isolated a methyltransferase by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, which would transfer methyl groups to arginine residues in soluble histone H4. However, this enzyme would not methylate nucleosomal or chromosomal bound histone H4, nor were methylated arginine nucleosomal or chromosomal bound histone H4, nor were methylated arginine residues detectable upon incubating intact nuclei or chromatin with S-adenosylmethionine.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Binding of the EcoRII methylase to azacytosine-containing DNA.   总被引:10,自引:8,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Binding of DNA(cytosine-5)methyltransferases to azacytosine containing DNA is stimulated by the presence of S-adenosyl-methionine or its analogs sinefungin or S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine. Methylation of the DNA is therefore not necessary for binding to occur. There is no relationship between the affinity of the analog for the EcoRII enzyme and its ability to stimulate binding. The DNA-enzyme complex partially dissociates on incubation in 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate and 0.5 M ammonium acetate. Some of this DNA could again form a tight complex with enzyme, indicating that DNA-enzyme complex formation is reversible. Binding occurs when the second cytosine in the sequence CCAGG is substituted by azacytosine. This is the cytosine that would normally be methylated by the enzyme. The binding is therefore due to specific interaction of the methylase with azacytosine at the site it would normally methylate.  相似文献   

19.
Two DNA methylase activities of Escherichia coli C, the mec (designates DNA-cytosine-methylase gene, which is also designated dcm) and dam gene products, were physically separated by DEAE-cellulose column chromatography. The sequence and substrate specificity of the two enzymes were studied in vitro. The experiments revealed that both enzymes show their expected sequence specificity under in vitro conditions, methylating symmetrically on both DNA strands. The mec enzyme methylates exclusively the internal cytosine residue of CCATGG sequences, and the dam enzyme methylates adenine residues at GATC sites. Substrate specificity experiments revealed that both enzymes methylate in vitro unmethylated duplex DNA as efficiently as hemimethylated DNA. The results of these experiments suggest that the methylation at a specific site takes place by two independent events. A methyl group in a site on one strand of the DNA does not facilitate the methylation of the same site on the opposite strand. With the dam methylase it was found that the enzyme is incapable of methylating GATC sites located at the ends of DNA molecules.  相似文献   

20.
StsI endonuclease (R.StsI), a type IIs restriction endonuclease found in Streptococcus sanguis 54, recognizes the same sequence as FokI but cleaves at different positions. A DNA fragment that carried the genes for R.StsI and StsI methylase (M.StsI) was cloned from the chromosomal DNA of S.sanguis 54, and its nucleotide sequence was analyzed. The endonuclease gene was 1,806 bp long, corresponding to a protein of 602 amino acid residues (M(r) = 68,388), and the methylase gene was 1,959 bp long, corresponding to a protein of 653 amino acid residues (M(r) = 76,064). The assignment of the endonuclease gene was confirmed by analysis of the N-terminal amino acid sequence. Genes for the two proteins were in a tail-to-tail orientation, separated by a 131-nucleotide intercistronic region. The predicted amino acid sequences between the StsI system and the FokI system showed a 49% identity between the methylases and a 30% identity between the endonucleases. The sequence comparison of M.StsI with various methylases showed that the N-terminal half of M.StsI matches M.NIaIII, and the C-terminal half matches adenine methylases that recognize GATC and GATATC.  相似文献   

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