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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)
The EcaI GGTNACC-specific DNA-adenine modification
methyltransferase
has been purified to apparent homogeneity. The active form of the
DNA methyltransferase
is a single polypeptide. The enzyme has a pH optimum at pH 8.0 and a temperature optimum at 25 degrees C. EcaI
DNA methyltransferase
transfers one methyl group to the adenine of the recognition site in a single binding event. The Km was 170 nM for DNA and 1.8 microM for the methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine. Methylated DNA is a competitive inhibitor with respect to DNA (Ki = 3.5 nM). The other product of the DNA-methylation reaction, S-adenosylhomocysteine was found to be a competitive inhibitor with respect to S-adenosylmethionine (Ki = 2.7 microM). The S-adenosylmethionine analog sinefungin was shown to be a very strong inhibitor (Ki = 3.5 nM) of the
DNA methyltransferase
reaction.
...
PMID:Purification and biochemical characterization of the EcaI DNA methyltransferase. 139 13
A second DNA site-specific (restriction) endonuclease (R.CviAII) and its cognate adenine
DNA methyltransferase
(M.CviAII) were isolated from virus PBCV-1 infected Chlorella strain NC64A cells. R.CviAII, a heteroschizomer of the bacterial restriction endonuclease NlaIII, recognizes the sequence CATG, and does not cleave CmATG sequences. However, unlike NlaIII, which cleaves after the G and does not cleave either CmATG or mCATG sequences, CviAII cleaves between the C and A and is unaffected by mCATG methylation. The M.CviAII and R.CviAII genes were cloned and their DNA sequences were determined. These genes are tandemly arranged head-to-tail such that the TAA termination codon of the M.CviAII
methyltransferase
gene overlaps the ATG translational start site of R.CviAII endonuclease. R.CviAII is the first chlorella virus site-specific endonuclease gene to be cloned and sequenced.
...
PMID:Characterization of Chlorella virus PBCV-1 CviAII restriction and modification system. 143 52
The EcoRI adenine
DNA methyltransferase
forms part of a bacterial restriction/modification system; the
methyltransferase
modifies the second adenine within the canonical site GAATTC, thereby preventing the EcoRI endonuclease from cleaving this site. We show that five noncanonical EcoRI sites (TAATTC, CAATTC, GTATTC, GGATTC and GAGTTC) are not methylated in vivo under conditions when the canonical site is methylated. Only when the
methyltransferase
is overexpressed is partial in vivo methylation of the five sites detected. Our results suggest that the
methyltransferase
does not protect host DNA against potential endonuclease-mediated cleavage at noncanonical sites. Our related in vitro analysis of the
methyltransferase
reveals a low level of sequence-discrimination. We propose that the high in vivo specificity may be due to the active removal of methylated sequences by DNA repair enzymes (J. Bacteriology (1987), 169 3243-3250).
...
PMID:In vivo specificity of EcoRI DNA methyltransferase. 146 39
HpaII methylase
(M. HpaII), an example of a DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferase, was found to induce directly a high frequency of C-->U transition mutations in double-stranded DNA. A mutant pSV2-neo plasmid, constructed with an inactivating T-->C transition mutation creating a CCGG site, was incubated with M. HpaII in the absence of S-adenosylmethionine (SAM). This caused an approximately 10(4)-fold increase in the rate of reversion when the mutant neo plasmid was transformed into bacteria lacking uracil-DNA glycosylase. The mutation frequency was very sensitive to SAM concentration and was reduced to background when the concentration of the methyl donor exceeded 300 nM. The data support current models for the formation of a covalent complex between the
methyltransferase
and cytosine. They also suggest that the occurrence of mutational hot spots at CpG sites may not always be due to spontaneous deamination of 5-methylcytosine, but might also be initiated by enzymatic deamination of cytosine and proceed through a C-->U-->T pathway.
...
PMID:High frequency mutagenesis by a DNA methyltransferase. 147 45
The XcyI
restriction-modification system
from Xanthomonas cyanopsidis recognizes the sequence, CCCGGG. The XcyI endonuclease and methylase genes have been cloned and sequenced and were found to be aligned in a head to tail orientation with the methylase preceding and overlapping the endonuclease by one base pair. The nucleotide sequence codes for an N4 cytosine
methyltransferase
with a predicted molecular weight of 33,500 and an endonuclease comprised of 333 codons and a molecular weight of 36,600. Sequence comparisons revealed significant similarity between the XcyI, CfrI and SmaI methylisomers. In contrast, no similarity was detected between the primary structures of the XcyI and SmaI endonucleases. The XcyI
restriction-modification system
is highly homologous to the XmaI genes, although the DNA sequences flanking the genes rapidly diverge. The sequence of the XcyI endonuclease contains two motifs which have recently been identified as essential to the activity of the EcoRV endonuclease.
...
PMID:Structure and evolution of the XcyI restriction-modification system. 147 87
A
restriction-modification system
, designated MthTI, was localized on plasmid pFV1 from the thermophilic archaeon Methanobacterium thermoformicicum THF. The MthTI system is a new member of the family of GGCC-recognizing restriction-modification systems. Functional expression of the archaeal MthTI genes was obtained in Escherichia coli. The mthTIR and mthTIM genes are 843 and 990 bp in size and code for proteins of 281 (32,102 Da) and 330 (37,360 Da) amino acids, respectively. The deduced amino acid sequence of M.MthTI showed high similarity with that of the isospecific methyltransferases M.NgoPII and M.HaeIII. In addition, extensive sequence similarity on the amino acid level was observed for the endonucleases R.MthTI and R.NgoPII. Moreover, the endonuclease and
methyltransferase
genes of the thermophilic MthTI system and those of the Neisseria gonorrhoeae NgoPII system show identical organizations and high (54.5%) nucleotide identity. This finding suggests horizontal transfer of restriction-modification systems between members of the domains Bacteria and Archaea.
...
PMID:Characterization of the archaeal, plasmid-encoded type II restriction-modification system MthTI from Methanobacterium thermoformicicum THF: homology to the bacterial NgoPII system from Neisseria gonorrhoeae. 151 4
EcoRI
DNA methyltransferase
contains tryptophans at positions 183 and 225. Tryptophan 225 is adjacent to residues previously implicated in S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) binding and to cysteine 223, previously shown to be the site of N-ethyl maleimide-mediated inactivation of the enzyme (Reich, N. O., and Everett, E. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 8929-8934; Everett, E. A., Falick, A. M., and Reich, N. O. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 17713-17719). The fluorescence spectra of the wild-type enzyme is centered at 338 nm indicating partial tryptophan solvent accessibility. Substitution of tryptophan 183 with phenylalanine results in a 45% drop in fluorescence intensity, but no shift in lambda max. DNA binding to the wild-type
methyltransferase
caused an increase in the fluorescence intensity, while binding to the tryptophan 183 mutant had a quenching effect, suggesting that DNA binding induces a conformational change near both tryptophans. Binding of AdoMet and various AdoMet analogs to the wild-type
methyltransferase
results in no change in the fluorescence spectrum when excitation occurs at 295 nm, suggesting that no conformational change occurs, and AdoMet does not interact with either tryptophan. In contrast, quenching was observed when excitation occurred at 280 nm, suggesting that AdoMet and its analogs may be quenching tyrosine to tryptophan energy transfer. Protein-ligand complexes were titrated with acrylamide, and the data also implicate conformational changes upon DNA binding but not upon AdoMet binding, consistent with previous limited proteolysis results (Reich, N. O., Maegley, K. A., Shoemaker, D.D., and Everett, E. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 2940-2946).
...
PMID:Cofactor and DNA interactions in EcoRI DNA methyltransferase. Fluorescence spectroscopy and phenylalanine replacement for tryptophan 183. 152 89
We present a novel strategy with synthetic hemimethylated DNA substrates containing uracil for thymine and inosine for guanosine replacements and EcoRI
DNA methyltransferase
to characterize the importance of major groove hydrophobic groups to the sequence-specific modification of DNA. The bacterial Mtase uses S-adenosyl-L-methionine to methylate the double-stranded DNA site 5'GAATTC3' at the N6 position of the central adenosine of each strand. Uracil substitution in either strand at the outer thymine (5'GAATUC3') causes 2.2- and 1.7-fold improvements in specificity (kcat/KmDNA). The fact that the specificity constant for the substrate containing uracil in both strands is identical to the value expected for noninteracting substitutions suggests that no significant
methyltransferase
-DNA interactions are altered beyond the site of either substitution. Similar analysis of the internal thymine (5'GAAUTC3') also shows these methyl groups to make a negative contribution to specificity, although the observed nonadditivity with the doubly modified substrate clearly shows
methyltransferase
-DNA interactions beyond the site of substitution to be affected in this case. To further probe the effect of analogue incorporation on
methyltransferase
-DNA interactions beyond the site of substitution, the relatively "silent" and additive uracil changes (5'GAATUC3') were combined with inosine for guanosine substitutions (e.g., 5'IAATTC3') known to have significant negative effects on specificity. In contrast to the additivity observed with the outer thymines, these studies show significant changes in
methyltransferase
-DNA interactions caused by the removal of the thymine methyls. Our results implicate a complex and flexible
methyltransferase
-DNA interface in which subtle structural changes in the substrate are transmitted over the entire canonical site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:EcoRI DNA methyltransferase-DNA interactions. 153 35
The genes from Haemophilus parainfluenzae encoding the HpaI
restriction-modification system
were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. From the DNA sequence, we predicted the HpaI endonuclease (R.HpaI) to have 254 amino acid residues (Mr 29,630) and the HpaI
methyltransferase
(M.HpaI) to have 314 amino acid residues (37,390). The R.HpaI and M.HpaI genes overlapped by 16 base pairs on the chromosomal DNA. The genes had the same orientation. The clone, named E. coli HB101-HPA2, overproduced R.HpaI. R.HpaI activity from the clone was 100-fold that from H. parainfluenzae. The amino acid sequence of M.HpaI was compared with those of other type II methyltransferases.
...
PMID:Cloning and expression of the HpaI restriction-modification genes. 154 67
The nucleotide sequence of the genes encoding
methyltransferase
TaqI (M.TaqI) and restriction endonuclease TaqI (R.TaqI) with the recognition sequence, TCGA, were analyzed in clones isolated from independent libraries. The genes, originally reported as 363 and 236 codons long [Slatko et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 15 (1987) 9781-9796] were redetermined as 421 and 263 codons long, respectively. The C terminus of the taqIM gene overlaps the N terminus of the taqIR gene by 13 codons, as observed with the isoschizomeric TthHB8I
restriction-modification system
[Barany et al., Gene 112 (1992) 13-20]. Removal of the overlapping codons did not interfere with in vivo M.TaqI activity. We postulate the overlap plays a role in regulating taqIR expression.
...
PMID:The corrected nucleotide sequences of the TaqI restriction and modification enzymes reveal a thirteen-codon overlap. 155 2
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