Affiliation:
1. Division of Molecular Biology, Department of Basic Medical Sciences, Institute of Medical Science, University of Tokyo, Shirokanedai, Tokyo 108-8639, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In prokaryotic genomes, some DNA methyltransferases form a restriction-modification gene complex, but some others are present by themselves. Dcm gene product, one of these orphan methyltransferases found in
Escherichia coli
and related bacteria, methylates DNA to generate 5′-C
m
CWGG just as some of its eukaryotic homologues do. Vsr mismatch repair function of an adjacent gene prevents C-to-T mutagenesis enhanced by this methylation but promotes other types of mutation and likely has affected genome evolution. The reason for the existence of the
dcm
-
vsr
gene pair has been unclear. Earlier we found that several restriction-modification gene complexes behave selfishly in that their loss from a cell leads to cell killing through restriction attack on the genome. There is also increasing evidence for their potential mobility.
Eco
RII restriction-modification gene complex recognizes the same sequence as Dcm, and its methyltransferase is phylogenetically related to Dcm. In the present work, we found that stabilization of maintenance of a plasmid by linkage of
Eco
RII gene complex, likely through postsegregational cell killing, is diminished by
dcm
function. Disturbance of
Eco
RII restriction-modification gene complex led to extensive chromosome degradation and severe loss of cell viability. This cell killing was partially suppressed by chromosomal
dcm
and completely abolished by
dcm
expressed from a plasmid. Dcm, therefore, can play the role of a “molecular vaccine” by defending the genome against parasitism by a restriction-modification gene complex.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
67 articles.
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