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Mol. Cell. Biol., Jun 1996, 3054-3065, Vol 16, No. 6
C Goyon, C Barry, A Gregoire, G Faugeron and JL Rossignol
In Ascobolus immersus, DNA duplications are subject to the process of
methylation induced premeiotically (MIP), which methylates the cytosine
residues within the repeats and results in reversible gene silencing. The
triggering of MIP requires pairing of the repeats, and its detection
requires maintenance of the resulting methylation. MIP of kilobase-size
duplications occurs frequently and leads to the methylation of all C
residues in the repeats, including those belonging to non-CpG sequences.
Using duplications of decreasing sizes, we observed that tandem repeats
never escaped MIP when larger than 630 bp and showed a sudden and drastic
drop in MIP frequencies when their sizes decreased from 630 to 317 bp. This
contrasted with the progressive decrease of MIP frequencies observed with
ectopic repeats, in which apparently the search for homology influences the
MIP triggering efficiency. The minimal size actually required for a repeat
to undergo detectable MIP was found to be close to 300 bp. Genomic
sequencing and Southern hybridization analyses using restriction enzymes
sensitive to C methylation showed a loss of methylation at non- CpG sites
in short DNA segments, methylation being restricted to a limited number of
CpG dinucleotides. Our data suggest the existence of two distinct
mechanisms underlying methylation maintenance, one responsible for
methylation at CpG sites and the other responsible for methylation at
non-CpG sites.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Methylation of DNA repeats of decreasing sizes in Ascobolus immersus
Institut de Genetique et Microbiologie, Unite de Recherche Associee 1354, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Universite Paris- Sud, Orsay, France.
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