Publication | Open Access
Mechanisms of DNA Demethylation in Chicken Embryos
129
Citations
15
References
1995
Year
We have previously shown that in developing chicken embryos and differentiating mouse myoblasts, the demethylation of 5-metCpGs occurs through the replacement of 5-methylcytosine by cytosine (Jost, J. P. (1993) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 90, 4685-4688; Jost, J. P. & Jost, Y.C. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 10040-10043). We have now purified over 30,000-fold a 5-methylcytosine-DNA glycosylase from 12-day-old chicken embryos. The enzyme copurifies with a mismatch-specific thymine-DNA glycosylase and an apyrimidic-endonuclease. The reaction product of the highly purified 5-methylcytosine-DNA glycosylase is 5-methylcytosine. The copurified apyrimidic-endonuclease activity cleaves 3' from the apyrimidic sugar. A 52.5-kDa peptide, isolated as a single band from preparative SDS-polyacrylamide gels, has both the 5-methylcytosine-DNA glycosylase and the mismatch-specific thymine-DNA glycosylase activities. 5-Methylcytosine-DNA glycosylase has an apparent pI of 5.5-7.5 and maximal activity between pH 6.5 and 7.5. The Km for hemimethylated oligonucleotide substrate is 8 x 10(-8) M with a Vmax of 4 x 10(-11) mol/h/micrograms proteins. 5-Methylcytosine-DNA glycosylase binds equally well to methylated and non-methylated DNA. The enzyme reacts six times faster with the hemimethylated DNA than with the same bifilarly methylated DNA sequence, and single-stranded methylated DNA is not a substrate. The action of the enzyme is distributive.
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