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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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Base composition, content of pyrimidine isopliths and the degree of methylation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and nuclear DNA (nDNA) from various vertebrates and protozoon Crithidia oncopelti have been studied. MtDNAs from mammals (ox, rat) do not differ in fact in the GC content from the respective nDNA. The GC content in mtDNA from fishes (sheat fish) and birds (duck, chicken) is 1.5-2.5 mole % higher than in the respective nDNA. Kinetoplast DNA (kDNA) from Crithidia oncopelti (GC = 42.9 mole %) differs significantly in base composition from nDNA (GC = 51.3 mole %). All the mtDNA and kDNA studied differ from the respective nDNA by a lower degree of pyrimidine clustering. The amount of mono and dipyrimidine fragments in mtDNA is more than 30 mole %, whereas in nDNA it does not exceed 23 mole %. The quantity of long pyrimidine clusters (hexa and others) is 2-4 times lower in mtDNA than in nDNA. The lower degree of clustering of pyrimidine nucleotides seems to be a specific feature of all the mtDNA studied. This may be indicative of common traits in the organization and origin of mtDNA. All mtDNA of vertebrates contain 5-methylcytosine as a 'minor' base (1.5- 3.15 mole %) and surpass by 1.5-2 times the respective nDNA in the methylation degree. It has been found that in animals mtDNA is species specific as far as the 5-methyl-cytosine content is concerned. In mitochondria and nuclei of rat liver certain DNA methylase activity has been detected, which provides in vitro the methylation of cytosine residues both in homologous DNA and various heterologous DNAs. The specificity of methylation in vitro of cytosine residues in the same heterologous DNA from E. coli B varies with the source of enzymes. The mitochondrial enzyme methylates cytosine as the lone monopyrimidine residue, whereas the nuclear enzyme methylase cytosine in the di- and tripyrimidine fragments.
Mol Cell Biochem 1977 Feb 04
PMID:The structure of animal mitochondrial DNA (base composition, pyrimidine clusters, character of methylation). 32 87

The nucleotide composition, relative concentration of pyrimidine clusters, and the degree of methylation of the mitochondrial and nuclear DNA's of various vertebrates and the protozoan Crithidia oncopelti have been studied. With respect to the relative concentration of GC pairs, the mtDNA of animals (bull, rat) does not differ from the corresponding nDNA. The relative concentration of GC pairs in the mtDNA of certain fish and birds is 1.5-2.5 mole% higher than in the respective nDNA. The kinetoplast DNA of the protozoan C. oncopelti (where the relative concentration of the GC pairs is 42.9 mole %) differs very sharply in composition from the nDNA (where the relative concentration of GC pairs is 51.3 mole %). The mtDNA's and kDNA's studied are distinguished from the respective nDNA'S by a lower degree of clustering of pyrimidine nucleotides. The proportion of mono- and dipyrimidine fragments in the mtDNA and kDNA is 30 mole %, while in the nDNA it does not exceed 23 mole %. The relative concentration of long pyrimidine clusters (hexapyrimidine clusters of larger) in the mtDNA is smaller than in the nDNA by a factor of 2-5. The low degree of clustering of the pyrimidine nucleotides is apparently characteristic of all the known mtDNA's and may support the fact that they have a single type of organization and are of a single origin. All the vertebrate mtDNA's studied contain 5-methylcytosine as a minor base (1.5-3.15 mole %), and their level of methylation is 1.5-2 times greater than that in the respective nDNA's. It has been shown that animals display species specificity with respect to the 5-methylcytosine content in the mtDNA. Its distribution among the pyrimidine clusters in the bovine heart mtDNA differs substantially from that in the nDNA. This suggests that the methylation specificities of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA are different. A DNA methylase, which effects the in vitro methylation of cytosine residues both in the homologous mtDNA and in different heterologous DNA's, has been found in rat liver and bovine heart mitochondria. The specificity of the in vitro methylation of the cytosine residues in the same heterologous Escherichia coli B DNA by the nuclear and mitochondrial enzymes is different: The mitochondrial enzyme methylates predominantly in monopyrimidine fragments, and the nuclear enzyme methylates mostly in di- and tripyrimidine fragments. They, therefore, recognize different nucleotide sequences.
Mol Biol (Mosk)
PMID:Structure of animal mitochondrial DNA: nucleotide composition, pyrimidine clusters, and methylation character. 102 50

Over 60 producing strains of restriction endonucleases type II have been found among 500 different strains, mostly Enterobacteriaceae. The strain Citrobacter freundii 4111 produces restriction endonuclease CfrBI, a new isoschisomer of StyI. The genes of the restriction-modification system CfrBI were located on the multicopy plasmid pZE8 containing the Co1E1-type replicon and cloned to E. coli K802. The deletion variant of 3.2-kb pZE8 which contains intact restriction-modification and a DNA fragment responsible for autonomous plasmid replication was selected among the recombinant plasmids. The strain with higher R. CfrBI production (at least 10,000,000 U/g cells, which is 500-fold higher than the wild strain) was constructed.
Mol Gen Mikrobiol Virusol
PMID:[Plasmid localization and cloning of restriction modification genes from Citrobacter freundii 4111 strain]. 133 50

A cytosine-specific DNA methyltransferase (EC 2.1.1.37) has been purified to near homogeneity from a mealybug (Planococcus lilacinus). The enzyme can methylate cytosine residues in CpG sequences as well as CpA sequences. The apparent molecular weight of the enzyme was estimated as 135,000 daltons by FPLC. The enzyme exhibits a processive mode of action and a salt dependence similar to mammalian methylases. Mealybug methylase exhibits a preference for denatured DNA substrates.
Mol Cell Biochem 1992 Mar 25
PMID:Detection of a CpA methylase in an insect system: characterization and substrate specificity. 137 36

The restriction-modification system, named RMMunI, has been purified and characterised from Friend murine erythroleukemia cells. The site-specific endonuclease recognizes and cleaves the 5'C1AATTG nucleotide sequence. RMunI is an isoschizomer of RMfeI from Mycoplasma fermentans. Site-specific methylase modifies the second adenine residue in the same sequence (5'Cam6ATTG). It was established that the discovered enzymatic system is from mycoplasma which contaminates cell lines. Mycoplasma's DNA hybridizes with species-specific DNA probed for Mycoplasma fermentans and Mycoplasma arginini. The possible role of mycoplasmic restriction-modification enzymes in the process of acquired immune deficiency syndrome are discussed.
Mol Biol (Mosk)
PMID:[Mycoplasma restriction-modification system MunI and its possible role in pathogenesis processes]. 140 10

The PvuII endonuclease (PvuIIR) is a restriction enzyme from a type II restriction-modification system of Proteus vulgaris coded on plasmid pPvu1. The protein recognizes the DNA sequence 5' CAG'CTG 3' and shows no sequence homology to other restriction enzymes. This makes PvuIIR an interesting subject for structural determination. A purification procedure was developed that yields milligram quantities of the PvuIIR from plasmids expressed in the Escherichia coli strain HB101. The protein was crystallized using ammonium sulphate as precipitant. The crystals are orthorhombic, space group P2(1)2(1)2 with cell dimensions: a = 84.2 A, b = 106.2 A, c = 46.9 A. The asymmetric unit contains one PvuIIR dimer. Diffraction extends to 2.3 A, so the crystals may permit structural determination at atomic resolution.
J Mol Biol 1991 Dec 05
PMID:Purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction studies of the PvuII endonuclease. 174 88

IS112 is a transposable element identified in Streptomyces albus G by its frequent mutagenic insertion into the genes for the SalI restriction-modification system. IS112 is present in several copies in the genome of S. albus G. Homologous sequences were detected in other Streptomyces strains. Sequence analysis revealed that IS112 has a length of 883 bp with a GC content of 67.4%. The copy that was isolated contained imperfect inverted repeats (16/20 match) at its ends and was flanked by a 2 bp duplication at the target site, which was located within the gene (salIR) for the SalI endonuclease. A long open reading frame (ORF) encoding a putative polypeptide of 256-253 amino acids spans almost the entire sequence. Significant homology was detected between this polypeptide and that corresponding to ORFB of IS493, an insertion sequence recently isolated from Streptomyces lividans 66.
Mol Gen Genet 1991 Jan
PMID:Isolation and genetic structure of IS112, an insertion sequence responsible for the inactivation of the SalI restriction-modification system of Streptomyces albus G. 184 88

The symmetry of the responses of the human DNA (cytosine-5)methyltransferase to alternative placements of 5-methylcytosine in model oligodeoxynucleotide duplexes containing unusual structures has been examined. The results of these experiments more clearly define the DNA recognition specificity of the enzyme. A simple three-nucleotide recognition motif within the CG dinucleotide pair can be identified in each enzymatically methylated duplex. The data can be summarized by numbering the four nucleotides in the dinucleotide pair thus: 1 4/2 3. With reference to this numbering scheme, position 1 can be occupied by cytosine or 5-methylcytosine; position 2 can be occupied by guanosine or inosine; position 3, the site of enzymatic methylation, can be occupied only by cytosine; and position 4 can be occupied by guanosine, inosine, O6-methylguanosine, cytosine, adenosine, an abasic site, or the 3' hydroxyl group at the end of a gapped molecule. Replacing the guanosine normally found at position 4 with any of the moieties introduces unusual (non-Watson-Crick) pairing at position 3 and generally enhances methylation of the cytosine at that site. The exceptional facility of the enzyme in actively methylating unusual DNA structures suggests that the evolution of the DNA methyltransferase, and perhaps DNA methylation itself, may be linked to the biological occurrence of unusual DNA structures.
J Mol Biol 1991 Jan 05
PMID:Recognition of unusual DNA structures by human DNA (cytosine-5)methyltransferase. 198 79

A region upstream of the mouse adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (aprt) gene has a well characterized methylation pattern for HpaII/MspI sites. When an unmethylated plasmid construct containing this region was transfected into P19 mouse teratocarcinoma stem cells appropriate de novo methylation was observed. However, de novo methylation was significantly reduced when this plasmid was introduced into a differentiated derivative of the P19 stem cell line. Finally, a position effect for de novo methylation was shown by demonstrating methylation of a normally unmethylated HpaII/MspI site when it was placed in this upstream region. This system should prove useful for elucidating DNA signals for de novo methylation and changes in DNA methyltransferase activities that occur during cellular differentiation.
Somat Cell Mol Genet 1991 Mar
PMID:Region- and cell type-specific de novo DNA methylation in cultured mammalian cells. 201 93

The gene encoding the Neisseria lactamica III DNA methyltransferase (M.NlaIII) which recognizes the sequence CATG has been cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. DNA sequencing of a 3.125 kb EcoRI-PstI fragment localizes the M. NlaIII gene to a 334 codon open reading frame (ORF) and identifies, 468 bp downstream, a second ORF of 313 amino acids, which is referred to as M.NlaX. Both proteins are detectable in the E. coli coupled in vitro transcription-translation system; they are apparently expressed from separate N. lactamica promoters. The N-terminal half of the previously characterized M.FokI, which methylates adenine in one of the DNA strands with its asymmetric recognition sequence (GGATG), is found to have 41% sequence identity and a further 11.7% sequence similarity with M.NlaIII. Among the conserved amino acids is the wellknown DPPY sequence motif. With one exception, analysis of the nucleotides coding for the DP dipeptide in all known DPPY sequences shows the presence of an inherent DNA adenine methylation (dam) recognition site of GATC. A low level of expression of M.NlaX in E. coli prevents the elucidation of its sequence recognition specificity. Sequence analysis of M.NlaX shows that it is closely related to the group of monospecific 5-methylcytosine DNA methyltransferases (M.EcoRII, Dcm, M.HpaII and M.HhaI) which all have a modified cytosine at the second position of the recognition sequences. Both M.EcoRII and Dcm amino acid sequences are about 50% identical with M.NlaX; a considerable degree of sequence identity is found in the so-called variable region which is believed to be responsible for sequence recognition specificity. M.NlaX is probably the counterpart to the E. coli Dcm in N. lactamica.
Mol Gen Genet 1990 Oct
PMID:Cloning and characterization of two tandemly arranged DNA methyltransferase genes of Neisseria lactamica: an adenine-specific M.NlaIII and a cytosine-type methylase. 227 28


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