Simultaneous sequencing of oxidized methylcytosines produced by TET/JBP proteins in Coprinopsis cinerea [CMS-seq]
Source: NCBI BioProject (ID PRJNA203154)
Source: NCBI BioProject (ID PRJNA203154)
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Project name: Coprinopsis cinerea
Description: TET/JBP enzymes oxidize 5-methylpyrimidines in DNA. In mammals, the oxidized methylcytosines (oxi-mC) function as epigenetic marks and likely intermediates in DNA demethylation. Here we present a novel diglucosylation-based method to simultaneously map 5hmC, 5fC and 5caC at near base-pair resolution, and verify the results using independent methods. We have used the method to map the distribution of oxi-mC across the genome of Coprinopsis cinerea, a basidiomycete that encodes 47 TET/JBP paralogs in a new class of DNA transposons. Like 5-methylcytosine (5mC) residues from which they are derived, oxi-mC modifications are enriched at centromeres, TET/JBP transposons, and multicopy paralogous genes that are not expressed, but rarely mark genes whose expression changes between two developmental stages. Our study provides evidence for the emergence of an epigenetic regulatory system through recruitment of selfish elements in a eukaryotic lineage, and describes a method to map all three different species of oxi-mC simultaneously.Overall design: Anti-CMS data has been generated for two biological replicates where one biological replicate has three technical replicates and the other biological replicate has two technical replicaltes. For each biologial replicate one Input replicate has been generated.based on sodium bisulfite-mediated conversion of 5hmC to cytosine-5-methylenesulfonate (CMS); CMS-containing DNA fragments are then immunoprecipitated using a CMS-specific antiserum.
Data type: Epigenomics
Sample scope: Multiisolate
Relevance: Environmental
Organization: German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ)
Literatures
- PMID: 25406324
Last updated: 2013-05-15