Enzymatic DNA Methylation Is an Epigenetic Control for Genetic Functions
of the Cell
B. F. Vanyushin
Belozersky Institute of Physico-Chemical Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State
University, 119992 Moscow, Russia; fax: (7-095) 939-3181; E-mail:
vanyush@belozersky.msu.ru
Received December 24, 2004
In eukaryotic cells nuclear DNA is subjected to enzymatic methylation
resulting in formation of 5-methylcytosine residues mainly in CG and
CNG sequences. In plants and animals, this DNA methylation is species-,
tissue-, and organelle-specific. It changes (diminishes) with age and
is regulated by hormones. On the other hand, genome methylation can
control hormonal signal. There are replicative and postreplicative DNA
methylations. They are served by multiple DNA-methyltransferases with
different site specificity. Replication is accompanied by appearance of
hemimethylated sites in DNA; pronounced asymmetry of DNA chain
methylation disappears at the end of the cell cycle; a model of
regulation of replication by DNA methylation is suggested. DNA
methylation controls all genetic processes in the cell (replication,
transcription, DNA repair, recombination, gene transposition) and it is
a mechanism of cell differentiation, gene discrimination, and
silencing. Prohibition of DNA methylation stops development
(embryogenesis), switches on apoptosis, and is usually lethal.
Distortions in DNA methylations result in cancerous cell
transformation, and the DNA methylation pattern is one of the safe
cancer diagnostics at early stages of carcinogenesis. The malignant
cell has a different DNA methylation pattern and a set of
DNA-methyltransferase activities expressed as compared with normal
cells. Inhibition of DNA methylation in plants is accompanied by
induction of genes of seed storage proteins and flowering. In
eukaryotes one and the same gene can be methylated both on cytosine and
adenine residues; thus, there are, at least, two different and probably
interdependent systems of DNA methylation in the cell. First higher
eukaryotic adenine DNA-methyltransferase was isolated from plants; this
enzyme methylates DNA with formation of N6-methyladenine
residues in the sequence TGATCA → TGm6ATCA.
Plants have AdoMet-dependent endonucleases sensitive to DNA methylation
status; therefore, like microorganisms, plants seem to have a
restriction-modification (R-S) system. Revelation of an essential role
of DNA methylation in the regulation of genetic processes has laid a
foundation for and materialized epigenetics and epigenomics.
KEY WORDS: apoptosis, DNA methylation, mitochondria, epigenetics,
cancer, aging, regulation of replication, transcription,
adenine-DNA-methyltransferase, methyl-DNA-binding proteins, plants