Cell Cycle Constraints and Environmental Control of Local DNA Hypomethylation in α-Proteobacteria.
Silvia ArdissonePeter RedderGiancarlo RussoAntonio FrandiCoralie FumeauxAndrea PatrignaniRalph SchlapbachLaurent FalquetPatrick H ViollierPublished in: PLoS genetics (2016)
Heritable 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 system Caulobacter 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 the 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.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- single molecule
- cell proliferation
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- copy number
- escherichia coli
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- circulating tumor
- staphylococcus aureus
- cell free
- atomic force microscopy
- antimicrobial resistance
- single cell
- dna binding
- biofilm formation
- oxidative stress
- living cells
- microbial community
- candida albicans
- circulating tumor cells
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- long non coding rna
- risk assessment
- heat shock
- genome wide identification
- binding protein