| Literature DB >> 11459824 |
L Bartee1, F Malagnac, J Bender.
Abstract
Plants maintain cytosine methylation at CG and non-CG residues to control gene expression and genome stability. In a screen for Arabidopsis mutants that alter methylation and silencing of a densely methylated endogenous reporter gene, we recovered 11 loss-of-function alleles in the CMT3 chromomethylase gene. The cmt3 mutants displayed enhanced expression and reduced methylation of the reporter, particularly at non-CG cytosines. CNG methylation was also reduced at repetitive centromeric sequences. Thus, CMT3 is a key determinant for non-CG methylation. The lack of CMT homologs in animal genomes could account for the observation that in contrast to plants, animals maintain primarily CG methylation.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11459824 PMCID: PMC312734 DOI: 10.1101/gad.905701
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Dev ISSN: 0890-9369 Impact factor: 11.361