Title: 5-Methylcytosine as Mutagenic
15-Methylcytosine as Mutagenic Hot Spot in
Duplex DNA
Presented byBlake Miller Department of
Biochemistry and Biophysics
Dr. Christopher Mathews Laboratory
2What is 5-Methylcytosine?
- Modified nucleobase similar to cytosine but takes
on different biochemical properties.
3Why Methylate DNA?
- Methylation modifies nucleotides for regulation
of gene expression. - Used as methyl tag in prokaryotes for genomic
stability (mismatch repair). - Protects DNA from restriction endonucleases.
4Some Facts About
5-Methylcytosine
- Represents about 2-3 of all cytosines in the
mammalian genome - Represents lt1 of all nucleotides in the genome
- Responsible for 30-40 of point mutations leading
to human genetic disorders or cancer
5Flagging/Controlling with
5-Methylcytosine
- X-inactivation
- Gene repression
- Markers (bacteria)
- Restriction and modification
6What is X-inactivation?
- Occurs only in female somatic cells
- Dosage compensation
- Random inactivation
7Gene Repression
- DNA methylation acts as gene regulator by
inactivating specific genes. - Inactive genes are highly methylated in CpG rich
islands near promoter sequence.
8Genetic Markers in Bacteria
- During replication parent strand marked
- Assists in replication fidelity
9Restriction and Modification
- Endonuclease cleaves viral DNA
- DNA methylation inhibits cleavage
- DNA sequence in modified
- Viral DNA progeny able to continue
10Structural Similarities of Pyrimidines
11Project Scheme
- Transition mutagenesis is far more likely to
originate at a mC-G base pair than a C-G
base pair. Why?
12Use of the M13 Phagemid
- M13 plasmid is 6.4 kb in length
- Exists as filamentous, single-stranded phage DNA
upon infection. - Infects bacteria through sex pili coded by the F
factor (JM105 and JM109 E. coli). - Host cell converts DNA to replicative form (RF).
- Circularizes the filamentous DNA
- Converts to double-stranded DNA
13Methodology
- Purification of RF M13 plasmid using Qiagen
cellulose column. - Methylate four separate samples.
- 1 sample W/T with Msp I methylase.
- 1 sample W/T with Hpa II methylase.
- 1 sample Mut with Msp I methylase.
- 1 sample Mut with Hpa II methylase.
14Confirmation of Methylation
- Hpa II methylase creates nucleotide sequence that
is resistant to Hpa II endonuclease restriction. - Msp I methylase creates nucleotide sequence that
is resistant to Msp I endonuclease restriction.
15Methodology (continued)
- Run restriction digest with MspI and HpaII
endonucleases on the four samples. - 0.8 agarose gel
- Lane 1 W/T restricted with Hpa II
- Lane 2 HpaII W/T restricted with HpaII
- Lane 3. W/T restricted with Msp I
- Lane 4 Msp I W/T restricted with Msp I
- Lane 5 Mut restricted with Msp I
- Lane 6 Msp I Mut restricted with Msp I
- Lane 7 Mut restricted with Hpa II
- Lane 8 Hpa II Mut restricted with Hpa II
16Cytosine Methylation Causes Structural Insult to
B-form DNA
- Subtle structural modification from B-form DNA to
rare E-DNA conformation. - Exposes carbon 4 of cytosine base to water to
favor deamination. - Methylation results in a 21-fold faster mutation
rate (demonstrated in previous experiment).
17Structural or Chemical Basis for Mutagenesis?
- Use M13 Construct (CCGG)
- Methylate outside cytosine using Msp1 methylase
- Methylate inside cytosine using HpaII methylase
- Observe mutation rates over 4 month period
18Experiment from 1993
- Studying mutation as a function of methylation.
- Qualitative color assay using LacZa gene.
- Constructed gene unable to produce color.
- Both reversion mechanisms produce color.
19Spontaneous Deamination
20Results from 1993 Experiment
21(No Transcript)
22Acknowledgements
Dr. Chris Mathews Mathews Lab HHMI NSF