| |
DNA methylation
DNA methylation is universal in bacteria,plant, and animal. DNA methylation is a type of chemical modification of DNA that are stable over rounds of cell division but do not involve changes in the underlying DNA sequence of the organism. Chromatin and DNA modifications are two important features of Epigenetics and play a role in the process of cellular differentiation, allowing cells to stably maintain different characteristics despite containing the same genomic material. However, the DNA methylation level is dynamic over the course of development in multicellular organisms.
In prokaryotic organisms, DNA methylation occurs at the number 5 carbon of the cytosine pyrimidine ring and the number 6 nitrogen of the adenine purine ring. However, in eukaryotic organisms DNA methylation occurs only at the number 5 carbon of the cytosine pyrimidine ring. In mammalian, DNA methylation occurs most at the number 5 carbon of the cytosine of a CpG dinucleotide. CpG dinucleotide is only 1% in human genome, which is great fewer than expected.
Between 70-80% of all CpGs are methylated. Unmethylated CpGs are grouped in clusters called "CpG islands" that are present in the 5' regulatory regions of many genes. In many disease processes such as cancer, gene promoter CpG islands acquire abnormal hypermethylation, which results in heritable transcriptional silencing. DNA methylation may impact the transcription of genes in two ways. First, the methylation of DNA may itself physically impede the binding of transcriptional proteins to the gene, thus blocking transcription. Second, and likely more important, methylated DNA may be bound by proteins known as Methyl-CpG-binding domain proteins (MBDs). MBD proteins then recruit additional proteins to the locus, such as histone deacetylases and other chromatin remodelling proteins that can modify histones, thereby forming compact, inactive chromatin termed silent chromatin. This link between DNA methylation and chromatin structure is very important. In particular, loss of Methyl-CpG-binding Protein 2 (MeCP2) has been implicated in Rett syndrome and Methyl-CpG binding domain protein 2 (MBD2) mediates the transcriptional silencing of hypermethylated genes in cancer.
|
|