scholarly journals Differential cleavate of physarum DNA from distinct points of S phase by restriction enzyme Eco RI

FEBS Letters ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 234-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helmut Fouquet ◽  
Helmut W. Sauer
Keyword(s):  
S Phase ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 257 (14) ◽  
pp. 7911-7914
Author(s):  
J K Barton ◽  
L A Basile ◽  
S R Paranawithana
Keyword(s):  

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia Ardissone ◽  
Peter Redder ◽  
Giancarlo Russo ◽  
Antonio Frandi ◽  
Coralie Fumeaux ◽  
...  

AbstractHeritable DNA methylation imprints are ubiquitous and underlie genetic variability from bacteria to humans. In microbial genomes, DNA methylation has been implicated in gene transcription, DNA replication and repair, nucleoid segregation, transposition and virulence of pathogenic strains. Despite the importance of local (hypo)methylation at specific loci, how and when these patterns are established during the cell cycle remains poorly characterized. Taking advantage of the small genomes and the synchronizability of α-proteobacteria, we discovered that conserved determinants of the cell cycle transcriptional circuitry establish specific hypomethylation patterns in the cell cycle model systemCaulobacter crescentus.We used genome-wide methyl-N6-adenine (m6A-) analyses by restriction-enzyme-cleavage sequencing (REC-Seq) and single-molecule real-time (SMRT) sequencing to show that MucR, a transcriptional regulator that represses virulence and cell cycle genes in S-phase but no longer in G1-phase, occludes 5’-GANTC-3’ sequence motifs that are methylated by he DNA adenine methyltransferase CcrM. Constitutive expression of CcrM or heterologous methylases in at least two different α-proteobacteria homogenizes m6A patterns even when MucR is present and affects promoter activity. Environmental stress (phosphate limitation) can override and reconfigure local hypomethylation patterns imposed by the cell cycle circuitry that dictate when and where local hypomethylation is instated.Author SummaryDNA methylation is the post-replicative addition of a methyl group to a base by a methyltransferase that recognise a specific sequence, and represents an epigenetic regulatory mechanism in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes. In microbial genomes, DNA methylation has been implicated in gene transcription, DNA replication and repair, nucleoid segregation, transposition and virulence of pathogenic strains. CcrM is a conserved, cell cycle regulated adenine methyltransferase that methylates GANTC sites in α-proteobacteria. N6-methyl-adenine (m6A) patterns generated by CcrM can change the affinity of a given DNA-binding protein for its target sequence, and therefore affect gene expression. Here, we combine restriction enzyme cleavage-deep sequencing (REC-Seq) with SMRT sequencing to identify hypomethylated 5’-GANTC-3’ (GANTCs) in α-proteobacterial genomes instated by conserved cell cycle factors. By comparing SMRT and REC-Seq data with chromatin immunoprecipitation-deep sequencing data (ChIP-Seq) we show that a conserved transcriptional regulator, MucR, induces local hypomethylation patterns by occluding GANTCs to the CcrM methylase and we provide evidence that this competition occurs during S-phase, but not in G1-phase cells. Furthermore, we find that environmental signals (such as phosphate depletion) are superimposed to the cell cycle control mechanism and can override the specific hypomethylation pattern imposed by the cell cycle transcriptional circuitry.


2005 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-79
Author(s):  
Sofijan Hadi

Characterization used retriction enzyme on the 1784 bp (base pairs) DNA fragmen of glucoamylase gene (GLUI) of E. fibuligera ITB. R. cc. 64 has been done. The rectriction enzyme usage was Stu 1, Eco RI, Eco RV, Bam HI and Sau 3A. The purpose of this research were: First was to know recognition site of 1784 bp DNA fragmen of glucoamylase gene (GLUI) by the restriction enzyme above. The second was to know homologyst the glucoamylase gene (GLUI) E. fibuligera ITB. R. cc. 64 and the glucoamylase gene (GLUI) Saccharomycopsis fibuligera HUT 7212 (pSf GLUI). The result of amplification glucoamylase gene (GLUI) indicated that 1784 bp DNA fragmen on GLUI locus has succesfully isolated and gave the same size with the positive control pSf GLUI. Analysis of those DNA fragmen by StuI, Eco RV, Eco RI, Bam HI and Sau 3A indicated that 1784 bp of DNA fragmen from E. fibuligera ITB.R.cc.64. has the same result with 1784 bp of DNA fragmen from pSf GLUI. The result of the fragments after incubated by restriction enzymes are as follows: 997 bp and 787 bp by Eco RI, 1000 bp and 1780 bp by Bam H) and 850 bp and 760 bp by Sau 3A. Digestion using StuI and Eco RI was failed. To ensure that the DNA fragmen 1784 bp has characteristic as glucoamylase gene, it should be expressed into S. cerevisiae and/or should be determined the nucleotide sequence by DNA sequencing.


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