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Query: EC:2.1.1.37 (
DNA methyltransferase
)
4,983
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
DNA in mammalian cells is enzymatically methylated at the 5-position of cytosine via S-adenosylmethionine and
DNA methyltransferase
. Several chemical carcinogens have been shown to inhibit this reaction, altering DNA methylation. We have been studying the mechanism by which carcinogens alter the methylation of DNA in order to better understand the cellular regulation of
DNA methylase
activity and to understand the role, if any, of DNA methylation in the carcinogenic process. We have utilized an in vitro assay for
DNA methylase
isolated from purified rat-liver nuclei. Ethionine, a liver carcinogen, given to rats 17 hr after partial hepatectomy inhibited the incorporation of [methyl-3H]-methionine into 5-methylcytosine residues of DNA. DNA isolated from these ethionine-treated rats was able to accept methyl groups from S-adenosylmethionine 8 times more than control DNA. It was further demonstrated that S-adenosylethionine competitively inhibited the
DNA methylase
resulting in hypomethylated DNA. N-Methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine reacted with the
DNA methylase
at the sulfhydryl sites inactivating the enzyme. Methylnitrosourea did not react directly with the methylase enzyme, but when reacted with DNA, the
DNA methylase
activity was inhibited by the carcinogen alkylated DNA. Sodium selenite also inhibited the enzyme non-competitively with a Ki of 6.7 microM. 5-Azacytidine prevented the 2 to 3 fold increase in
DNA methylase
seen 2 days following partial hepatectomy. All of these data with various carcinogens, altering DNA methylation by different mechanisms, support the hypothesis that DNA methylation plays a role in the initiation of carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Studies on DNA methyltransferase and alteration of the enzyme activity by chemical carcinogens. 243 29
Azacitidine is a pyrimidine ring analog of cytidine that is incorporated into RNA causing alteration in RNA synthesis and processing and resulting in inhibition of protein synthesis. Azacitidine as the deoxynucleotide is also incorporated into DNA inhibiting its synthesis and blocking cytosine methylation by noncompetitive inhibition of
DNA methyltransferase
. The resulting hypomethylation of DNA is thought to induce gene activation and expression and cell differentiation. This may be an underlying factor in azacitidine's antileukemic activity and also contributes to its carcinogenic and tumor-promoting properties in experimental models.
...
PMID:Biochemistry of azacitidine: a review. 244 43
The DNA of frog virus 3 (FV3), an iridovirus, is highly methylated; more than 20% of the cytosine bases are methylated at the 5-carbon position by an FV3-induced
DNA methyltransferase
(DNA-mt). To determine the role of this enzyme in virus replication and regulation of gene expression, we have analyzed an FV3 mutant that lacks DNA-mt activity and is resistant to 5-azacytidine (an inhibitor of DNA-mt). Comparative polypeptide analysis, using cytoplasmic extracts from the wild-type FV3 and mutant-infected cells, revealed that a single protein of 26,000 (26K) molecular weight was altered in the mutant-infected cells. The altered polypeptide migrated faster in SDS-polyacrylamide gel as compared to the wild-type FV3 26K protein. Five spontaneous revertants derived from the mutant regained the migrational characteristic of the wild-type 26K protein, DNA-mt activity, and methylation of their DNA. We further show that the 26K polypeptide is a DNA-binding protein and that 80% of the enzyme activity can be eluted from an ssDNA affinity column. Taken together, these data support the conclusion that the 26K polypeptide is associated with DNA-mt activity.
...
PMID:Mutation in a DNA-binding protein reveals an association between DNA-methyltransferase activity and a 26,000-Da polypeptide in frog virus 3-infected cells. 244 2
The repair of alkylation damage in Aspergillus nidulans was investigated. We have assayed soluble protein fractions for enzymes known to be involved in the repair of this type of damage in DNA. The presence of a glycosylase activity that can remove 3-methyladenine from DNA was demonstrated, as well as a
DNA methyltransferase
activity that appears to act against O6-methylguanine. In addition to this approach, a series of mutants were isolated which display increased sensitivity to alkylating agents (sag mutants). 5 such mutants were further characterized, and at least 4 are shown to map to genes which have not previously been characterized. The behaviour of double mutant combinations demonstrates the existence of at least 2 pathways for the repair of alkylation damage. The majority of the sag mutants (sagA1, sagB2, sag4 and sagE5) exhibit an increased sensitivity to a range of alkylating agents, but not to UV light, while sagC3, when irradiated at the germling stage, also shows sensitivity to UV. None of the mutants isolated are defective in either the 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase activity, or the
DNA methyltransferase
activity, and the nature of the defects in these strains remains to be determined.
...
PMID:Repair of alkylation damage in the fungus Aspergillus nidulans. 245 48
The cross-reactivity of the monoclonal anti-human placental
DNA methyltransferase
antibody M2B10 with DNA methyltransferases isolated from other species was investigated. This antibody immunoprecipitates DNA methyltransferases from mammalian cells, i.e., human placenta, mouse P815 cells, and rat liver cells. No cross-reactivity is observed with DNA methyltransferases from wheat germ and with bacterial DNA methyltransferases HpaII and EcoRI. The mammalian enzymes are characterized by polypeptides of molecular mass 150-190 kDa. Polypeptides smaller than 190 kDa are presumably generated by proteolysis of the native 190-kDa
DNA methyltransferase
. Trypsin digestion of the 190-kDa polypeptide isolated from mouse cells results in progressive appearance of
DNA methyltransferase
polypeptides of 150-190, 110, 100, and 52-60 kDa.
...
PMID:Polypeptide composition and an immunological analysis of DNA methyltransferases from different species. 246 90
The effect of DNA cytosine methylation on promoter activity was assessed using a transient expression system employing pHrasCAT. This 551 bp Ha-ras-1 gene promoter region is enriched with 84 CpG dinucleotides, six functional GC boxes, and is prototypic of many genes possessing CpG islands in their promoter regions. Bacterial modification enzymes HhaI methyl transferase (MTase) and HpaII MTase, alone or in combination with a human placental
DNA methyltransferase
(HP MTase) that methylates CpG sites in a generalized manner, including asymmetric elements such as GC box CpG's, were used to methylate at different types of sites in the promoter. Methylation of HhaI and HpaII sites reduced CAT expression by approximately 70%-80%, whereas methylation at generalized CpG sites with HP MTase inactivated the promoter by greater than 95%. The inhibition of H-ras promoter activity was not attributable to methylation-induced differences in DNA uptake or stability in the cell, topological form of the plasmid, or methylation effects in non-promoter regions.
...
PMID:In vitro DNA cytosine methylation of cis-regulatory elements modulates c-Ha-ras promoter activity in vivo. 247 94
DNA methyltransferase
activities have been partially purified from unfertilized eggs and blastula nuclei of sea urchin embryos. Comparative studies, using different DNAs as substrates, show that the two preparations are most active on hemimethylated and single-strand DNA, but they methylate, though at a lower rate, also on double-strand DNA. The two activities show distinctive efficiencies in methylating plasmid DNAs and marked differences in the rate of methyl transfer to DNAs in different structural states: linear, relaxed, or supercoiled. The ratio of the apparent specific activity of the two preparations depends on the particular DNA used as substrate and its structure. Methylation analysis of the restriction fragments of methylated plasmid DNAs shows a linear correlation between introduced methyl groups and the percent of CpG of each particular fragment, indicating that methylation is substantially random and sequence is less relevant than conformation in determining enzyme efficiency. The data do not permit us to decide if the two activities are different enzymes or the same enzyme with different modulating factors.
...
PMID:Sea urchin DNA methyltransferases. 247 20
The human melanoma cell line M21 can be induced to differentiate into oligodendrocyte-like cells with concommitant cessation of cell division. Cytosine-arabinoside, 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine, hydroxyurea, aphidicolin, and phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate were found to be potent differentiation inducers. We have analyzed the changes of methylation of DNA cytosines that occur after treatment of M21 cells with these compounds. Although DNA methylation levels remain unchanged in the presence of aphidicolin and phorbol ester, 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine-induced differentiation of these cells results in a 40% DNA demethylation. On the other hand, hydroxyurea and cytosine-arabinoside treatment causes DNA hypermethylation, which, in the case of the cytidine analogue is of only transient nature. These results show that the differentiation of human melanoma cells can be accompanied by variable changes of DNA methylation levels. In another set of experiments, the DNA methylation levels have been analyzed during cytosine-arabinoside-induced differentiation of human K562 erythroleukemia cells. In this system, a transient DNA demethylation precedes the establishment of the differentiated phenotype. Since DNA replication is inhibited, this demethylation cannot be explained by inhibition of the maintenance activity of
DNA methyltransferase
, but is more likely caused by an active excision of 5-methylcytosine from DNA.
...
PMID:The DNA methylation system in proliferating and differentiated cells. 247 29
The genome of the large icosahedral DNA virus, frog virus 3 (FV3), is heavily methylated at the cytosine residues of dCdG dinucleotide pairs, with more than 22% of the total cytosine residues in the form of 5-methylcytosine (5mC). This methylation is carried out postreplicatively in the cytoplasm of infected cells by a virus-encoded
DNA methyltransferase
.
DNA methyltransferase
activity was shown to copurify with a 26 kD virus-induced, DNA-binding protein that had an altered mobility in extracts from cells infected with a DNA-methyl-transferase deficient mutant of FV3. Immediately after infection, the highly methylated parental DNA is transcribed in the nucleus by the host cell RNA polymerase II. As FV3 induces the synthesis of a protein that can override the inhibitory effect of methylation on the transcription of exogenous promoters methylation in vitro, we suggest that this protein is a factor evolved by this virus to allow transcription from methylated promoters by eukaryotic RNA polymerase II.
...
PMID:Transcription of methylated viral DNA by eukaryotic RNA polymerase II. 247 31
Oligodeoxynucleotide-mediated mutagenesis of the ada gene of Escherichia coli was used to produce two mutant Ada proteins. In mutant I the methyl acceptor Cys-321 for O6-methylguanine was replaced by histidine; and in mutant II the positions of Cys-321 and His-322 of the wild-type protein were inverted. Neither mutant protein had O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase activity, but both retained the phosphotriester-
DNA methyltransferase
activity involving methyl group transfer to Cys-69. Under the control of the endogenous promoter, synthesis of mutant I protein was undetectable before or after adaptation treatment with promoter, synthesis of mutant I protein was undetectable before or after adaptation treatment with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine. This appeared to be due to both inhibition of transcription of the mutant gene and degradation of the synthesized protein. On the other hand, mutant II protein was inducible by N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, although to a smaller extent than the wild-type protein was, and the phosphotriester-
DNA methyltransferase
activity appeared to reside in 24- to 30-kilodalton cleavage products. Mutant I protein could be produced under lac promoter control, and its cleavage products, unlike those of mutant II protein, tended to aggregate. These results indicate that (i) Cys-321 cannot be replaced or transposed with the nucleophilic amino acid histidine for O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase function, (ii) single amino acid replacement or transposition at the O6-methylguanine methyl acceptor site can have a profound effect on the in vivo stability and regulatory function of the Ada protein, and (iii) the integrity of the protein may not be absolutely needed for its transcription-activation function.
...
PMID:Site-directed mutation of the Escherichia coli ada gene: effects of substitution of methyl acceptor cysteine-321 by histidine in Ada protein. 249 48
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