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DNA Methylation and RNA-DNA Hybrids Regulate the Single-Molecule Localization of a DNA Methyltransferase on the Bacterial Nucleoid

Bacterial DNA methyltransferases (MTases) function in restriction modification systems, cell cycle control, and the regulation of gene expression. DnmA is a recently described DNA MTase that forms N6-methyladenosine at nonpalindromic 5′-GACGAG-3′ sites in Bacillus subtilis, yet how DnmA activity is...

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Autores principales: Fernandez, Nicolas L., Chen, Ziyuan, Fuller, David E. H., van Gijtenbeek, Lieke A., Nye, Taylor M., Biteen, Julie S., Simmons, Lyle A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9973331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36645292
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03185-22
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author Fernandez, Nicolas L.
Chen, Ziyuan
Fuller, David E. H.
van Gijtenbeek, Lieke A.
Nye, Taylor M.
Biteen, Julie S.
Simmons, Lyle A.
author_facet Fernandez, Nicolas L.
Chen, Ziyuan
Fuller, David E. H.
van Gijtenbeek, Lieke A.
Nye, Taylor M.
Biteen, Julie S.
Simmons, Lyle A.
author_sort Fernandez, Nicolas L.
collection PubMed
description Bacterial DNA methyltransferases (MTases) function in restriction modification systems, cell cycle control, and the regulation of gene expression. DnmA is a recently described DNA MTase that forms N6-methyladenosine at nonpalindromic 5′-GACGAG-3′ sites in Bacillus subtilis, yet how DnmA activity is regulated is unknown. To address DnmA regulation, we tested substrate binding in vitro and found that DnmA binds poorly to methylated DNA and to an RNA-DNA hybrid with the DNA recognition sequence. Further, DnmA variants with amino acid substitutions that disrupt cognate sequence recognition or catalysis also bind poorly to DNA. Using superresolution fluorescence microscopy and single-molecule tracking of DnmA-PAmCherry, we characterized the subcellular DnmA diffusion and detected its preferential localization to the replisome region and the nucleoid. Under conditions where the chromosome is highly methylated, upon RNA-DNA hybrid accumulation, or with a DnmA variant with severely limited DNA binding activity, DnmA is excluded from the nucleoid, demonstrating that prior methylation or accumulation of RNA-DNA hybrids regulates the association of DnmA with the chromosome in vivo. Furthermore, despite the high percentage of methylated recognition sites and the proximity to putative endonuclease genes conserved across bacterial species, we find that DnmA fails to protect B. subtilis against phage predation, suggesting that DnmA is functionally an orphan MTase involved in regulating gene expression. Our work explores the regulation of a bacterial DNA MTase and identifies prior methylation and RNA-DNA hybrids as regulators of MTase localization. These MTase regulatory features could be common across biology.
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spelling pubmed-99733312023-03-01 DNA Methylation and RNA-DNA Hybrids Regulate the Single-Molecule Localization of a DNA Methyltransferase on the Bacterial Nucleoid Fernandez, Nicolas L. Chen, Ziyuan Fuller, David E. H. van Gijtenbeek, Lieke A. Nye, Taylor M. Biteen, Julie S. Simmons, Lyle A. mBio Research Article Bacterial DNA methyltransferases (MTases) function in restriction modification systems, cell cycle control, and the regulation of gene expression. DnmA is a recently described DNA MTase that forms N6-methyladenosine at nonpalindromic 5′-GACGAG-3′ sites in Bacillus subtilis, yet how DnmA activity is regulated is unknown. To address DnmA regulation, we tested substrate binding in vitro and found that DnmA binds poorly to methylated DNA and to an RNA-DNA hybrid with the DNA recognition sequence. Further, DnmA variants with amino acid substitutions that disrupt cognate sequence recognition or catalysis also bind poorly to DNA. Using superresolution fluorescence microscopy and single-molecule tracking of DnmA-PAmCherry, we characterized the subcellular DnmA diffusion and detected its preferential localization to the replisome region and the nucleoid. Under conditions where the chromosome is highly methylated, upon RNA-DNA hybrid accumulation, or with a DnmA variant with severely limited DNA binding activity, DnmA is excluded from the nucleoid, demonstrating that prior methylation or accumulation of RNA-DNA hybrids regulates the association of DnmA with the chromosome in vivo. Furthermore, despite the high percentage of methylated recognition sites and the proximity to putative endonuclease genes conserved across bacterial species, we find that DnmA fails to protect B. subtilis against phage predation, suggesting that DnmA is functionally an orphan MTase involved in regulating gene expression. Our work explores the regulation of a bacterial DNA MTase and identifies prior methylation and RNA-DNA hybrids as regulators of MTase localization. These MTase regulatory features could be common across biology. American Society for Microbiology 2023-01-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9973331/ /pubmed/36645292 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03185-22 Text en Copyright © 2023 Fernandez et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Fernandez, Nicolas L.
Chen, Ziyuan
Fuller, David E. H.
van Gijtenbeek, Lieke A.
Nye, Taylor M.
Biteen, Julie S.
Simmons, Lyle A.
DNA Methylation and RNA-DNA Hybrids Regulate the Single-Molecule Localization of a DNA Methyltransferase on the Bacterial Nucleoid
title DNA Methylation and RNA-DNA Hybrids Regulate the Single-Molecule Localization of a DNA Methyltransferase on the Bacterial Nucleoid
title_full DNA Methylation and RNA-DNA Hybrids Regulate the Single-Molecule Localization of a DNA Methyltransferase on the Bacterial Nucleoid
title_fullStr DNA Methylation and RNA-DNA Hybrids Regulate the Single-Molecule Localization of a DNA Methyltransferase on the Bacterial Nucleoid
title_full_unstemmed DNA Methylation and RNA-DNA Hybrids Regulate the Single-Molecule Localization of a DNA Methyltransferase on the Bacterial Nucleoid
title_short DNA Methylation and RNA-DNA Hybrids Regulate the Single-Molecule Localization of a DNA Methyltransferase on the Bacterial Nucleoid
title_sort dna methylation and rna-dna hybrids regulate the single-molecule localization of a dna methyltransferase on the bacterial nucleoid
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9973331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36645292
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03185-22
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