|
|
Edinburgh Research Archive >
Biological Sciences, School of >
Biological Sciences publications >
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/694
|
| Title: | The methylated component of the Neurospora crassa genome |
| Authors: | Selker, Eric U Tountas, Nikolaos A Cross, Sally H Margolin, Brian S Murphy, Jonathan G Bird, Adrian P Freitag, Michael |
| Issue Date: | 24-Apr-2003 |
| Citation: | Selker EU, Tountas NA, Cross SH, Margolin BS, Murphy JG, Bird AP, Freitag M, NATURE, 422 (6934): 893-897 APR 24 2003 |
| Publisher: | Nature Publishing Group |
| Abstract: | Cytosine methylation is common, but not ubiquitous, in eukaryotes.
Mammals (1) and the fungus Neurospora crassa (2,3) have about
2–3% of cytosines methylated. In mammals, methylation is
almost exclusively in the under-represented CpG dinucleotides,
and most CpGs are methylated (1) whereas in Neurospora, methylation
is not preferentially in CpG dinucleotides and the bulk of
the genome is unmethylated (4). DNA methylation is essential in
mammals (5) but is dispensable in Neurospora (3,6) making this
simple eukaryote a favoured organism in which to study methylation.
Recent studies indicate that DNA methylation in Neurospora
depends on one DNA methyltransferase, DIM-2 (ref. 6),
directed by a histone H3 methyltransferase, DIM-5 (ref. 7), but
little is known about its cellular and evolutionary functions. As
only four methylated sequences have been reported previously in
N. crassa, we used methyl-binding-domain agarose chromatography (8)
to isolate the methylated component of the genome. DNA
sequence analysis shows that the methylated component of the
genome consists almost exclusively of relics of transposons that
were subject to repeat-induced point mutation—a genome
defence system that mutates duplicated sequences (9). |
| Keywords: | methylated component Neurospora crassa genome |
| URI: | doi:10.1038/nature01564 http://www.nature.com/nature http://hdl.handle.net/1842/694 |
| Appears in Collections: | Biological Sciences publications
|
Items in ERA are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
|