Literature DB >> 18485662

Genome-scale relationships between cytosine methylation and dinucleotide abundances in animals.

Martin W Simmen1.   

Abstract

In mammalian genomes CpGs occur at one-fifth their expected frequency. This is accepted as resulting from cytosine methylation and deamination of 5-methylcytosine leading to TpG and CpA dinucleotides. The corollary that a CpG deficit should correlate with TpG excess has not hitherto been systematically tested at a genomic level. I analyzed genome sequences (human, chimpanzee, mouse, pufferfish, zebrafish, sea squirt, fruitfly, mosquito, and nematode) to do this and generally to assess the hypothesis that CpG deficit, TpG excess, and other data are accountable in terms of 5-methylcytosine mutation. In all methylated genomes local CpG deficit decreases with higher G + C content. Local TpG surplus, while positively associated with G + C level in mammalian genomes but negatively associated with G + C in nonmammalian methylated genomes, is always explicable in terms of the CpG trend under the methylation model. Covariance of dinucleotide abundances with G + C demonstrates that correlation analyses should control for G + C. Doing this reveals a strong negative correlation between local CpG and TpG abundances in methylated genomes, in accord with the methylation hypothesis. CpG deficit also correlates with CpT excess in mammals, which may reflect enhanced cytosine mutation in the context 5'-YCG-3'. Analyses with repeat-masked sequences show that the results are not attributable to repetitive elements.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18485662     DOI: 10.1016/j.ygeno.2008.03.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genomics        ISSN: 0888-7543            Impact factor:   5.736


  38 in total

1.  Cytosine Methylation Affects the Mutability of Neighboring Nucleotides in Germline and Soma.

Authors:  Vassili Kusmartsev; Magdalena Drożdż; Benjamin Schuster-Böckler; Tobias Warnecke
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2020-02-20       Impact factor: 4.562

2.  Large-scale recoding of an arbovirus genome to rebalance its insect versus mammalian preference.

Authors:  Sam H Shen; Charles B Stauft; Oleksandr Gorbatsevych; Yutong Song; Charles B Ward; Alisa Yurovsky; Steffen Mueller; Bruce Futcher; Eckard Wimmer
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-03-30       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  A method for identifying allele-specific hydroxymethylation.

Authors:  Yoichi Yamada; Sho Sasaki
Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2019-09-18       Impact factor: 4.528

4.  Interplay of Guanine Oxidation and G-Quadruplex Folding in Gene Promoters.

Authors:  Aaron M Fleming; Cynthia J Burrows
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2020-01-09       Impact factor: 15.419

5.  Expanded methyl-sensitive cut counting reveals hypomethylation as an epigenetic state that highlights functional sequences of the genome.

Authors:  Alejandro Colaneri; Nickolas Staffa; David C Fargo; Yuan Gao; Tianyuan Wang; Shyamal D Peddada; Lutz Birnbaumer
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-05-20       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Merida virus, a putative novel rhabdovirus discovered in Culex and Ochlerotatus spp. mosquitoes in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico.

Authors:  Jermilia Charles; Andrew E Firth; Maria A Loroño-Pino; Julian E Garcia-Rejon; Jose A Farfan-Ale; W Ian Lipkin; Bradley J Blitvich; Thomas Briese
Journal:  J Gen Virol       Date:  2016-02-11       Impact factor: 3.891

7.  Genomic features of the human dopamine transporter gene and its potential epigenetic States: implications for phenotypic diversity.

Authors:  Elena Shumay; Joanna S Fowler; Nora D Volkow
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-06-10       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Conversion of 5-methylcytosine to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine in mammalian DNA by MLL partner TET1.

Authors:  Mamta Tahiliani; Kian Peng Koh; Yinghua Shen; William A Pastor; Hozefa Bandukwala; Yevgeny Brudno; Suneet Agarwal; Lakshminarayan M Iyer; David R Liu; L Aravind; Anjana Rao
Journal:  Science       Date:  2009-04-16       Impact factor: 47.728

9.  Virus-host coevolution: common patterns of nucleotide motif usage in Flaviviridae and their hosts.

Authors:  Francisco P Lobo; Bruno E F Mota; Sérgio D J Pena; Vasco Azevedo; Andréa M Macedo; Andreas Tauch; Carlos R Machado; Glória R Franco
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-07-20       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  The genome of the stick insect Medauroidea extradentata is strongly methylated within genes and repetitive DNA.

Authors:  Veiko Krauss; Carina Eisenhardt; Tina Unger
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-09-29       Impact factor: 3.240

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