Pubfacts - Scientific Publication Data
  • Categories
  • |
  • Journals
  • |
  • Authors
  • Login
  • Categories
  • Journals

Search Our Scientific Publications & Authors

Publications
  • Publications
  • Authors
find publications by category +
Translate page:

Systematic analysis of the binding behaviour of UHRF1 towards different methyl- and carboxylcytosine modification patterns at CpG dyads.

Authors:
Markus Schneider Carina Trummer Andreas Stengl Peng Zhang Aleksandra Szwagierczak M Cristina Cardoso Heinrich Leonhardt Christina Bauer Iris Antes

PLoS One 2020 21;15(2):e0229144. Epub 2020 Feb 21.

Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich at the TUM School of Life Sciences, Technische Universität München, Freising, Germany.

The multi-domain protein UHRF1 is essential for DNA methylation maintenance and binds DNA via a base-flipping mechanism with a preference for hemi-methylated CpG sites. We investigated its binding to hemi- and symmetrically modified DNA containing either 5-methylcytosine (mC), 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (hmC), 5-formylcytosine (fC), or 5-carboxylcytosine (caC). Our experimental results indicate that UHRF1 binds symmetrically carboxylated and hybrid methylated/carboxylated CpG dyads in addition to its previously reported substrates. Complementary molecular dynamics simulations provide a possible mechanistic explanation of how the protein could differentiate between modification patterns. First, we observe different local binding modes in the nucleotide binding pocket as well as the protein's NKR finger. Second, both DNA modification sites are coupled through key residues within the NKR finger, suggesting a communication pathway affecting protein-DNA binding for carboxylcytosine modifications. Our results suggest a possible additional function of the hemi-methylation reader UHRF1 through binding of carboxylated CpG sites. This opens the possibility of new biological roles of UHRF1 beyond DNA methylation maintenance and of oxidised methylcytosine derivates in epigenetic regulation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0229144PLOS
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7034832PMC
May 2020

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cpg sites
8
dna methylation
8
modification patterns
8
nkr finger
8
methylation maintenance
8
cpg dyads
8
binding
6
dna
5
uhrf1
5
dyads addition
4
binding carboxylated
4
methylated/carboxylated cpg
4
reader uhrf1
4
substrates complementary
4
second dna
4
hemi-methylation reader
4
reported substrates
4
addition reported
4
hybrid methylated/carboxylated
4
uhrf1 binding
4

Keyword Occurance

Similar Publications

Differential DNA Methylation of the IMMP2L Gene in Families with Maternally Inherited 7q31.1 Microdeletions is Associated with Intellectual Disability and Developmental Delay.

Authors:
Stanislav A Vasilyev Nikolay A Skryabin Anna A Kashevarova Ekaterina N Tolmacheva Renata R Savchenko Oksana Yu Vasilyeva Maria E Lopatkina Alexei A Zarubin Veniamin S Fishman Elena O Belyaeva Miroslava O Filippova Asia R Shorina Arkadiy B Maslennikov Olga L Shestovskikh Tatyana A Gayner Vida Čulić Robert Vulić Lyudmila P Nazarenko Igor N Lebedev

Cytogenet Genome Res 2021 Apr 13:1-15. Epub 2021 Apr 13.

Research Institute of Medical Genetics, Tomsk National Research Medical Center, Tomsk, Russian Federation.

Most copy number variations (CNVs) in the human genome display incomplete penetrance with unknown underlying mechanisms. One such mechanism may be epigenetic modification, particularly DNA methylation. The IMMP2L gene is located in a critical region for autism susceptibility on chromosome 7q (AUTS1). Read More

View Article and Full-Text PDF
April 2021
Similar Publications

DNA methylation in cord blood in association with prenatal depressive symptoms.

Authors:
Theodora Kunovac Kallak Emma Bränn Emma Fransson Åsa Johansson Susanne Lager Erika Comasco Robert Lyle Alkistis Skalkidou

Clin Epigenetics 2021 Apr 12;13(1):78. Epub 2021 Apr 12.

Department of Women's and Children's Health, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.

Background: Prenatal symptoms of depression (PND) and anxiety affect up to every third pregnancy. Children of mothers with mental health problems are at higher risk of developmental problems, possibly through epigenetic mechanisms together with other factors such as genetic and environmental. We investigated DNA methylation in cord blood in relation to PND, taking into consideration a history of depression, co-morbidity with anxiety and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI) use, and stratified by sex of the child. Read More

View Article and Full-Text PDF
April 2021
Similar Publications
© 2021 PubFacts.
  • About PubFacts
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap