Mrr superfamily of homologous genes in microbial genomes restricts modified DNA in vivo. However, their biochemical properties in vitro have remained obscure. Here, we report the experimental characterization of MspJI, a remote homolog of Escherichia coli's Mrr and show it is a DNA modification-dependent restriction endonuclease. Our results suggest MspJI recognizes mCNNR (R = G/A) sites and cleaves DNA at fixed distances (N12/N16) away from the modified cytosine at the 3′ side (or N9/N13 from R). Besides 5-methylcytosine, MspJI also recognizes 5-hydroxymethylcytosine but is blocked by 5-glucosylhydroxymethylcytosine. Several other close homologs of MspJI show similar modification-dependent endonuclease activity and display substrate preferences different from MspJI. A unique feature of these modification-dependent enzymes is that they are able to extract small DNA fragments containing modified sites on genomic DNA, for example ~32 bp around symmetrically methylated CG sites and ~31 bp around methylated CNG sites. The digested fragments can be directly selected for high-throughput sequencing to map the location of the modification on the genomic DNA. The MspJI enzyme family, with their different recognition specificities and cleavage properties, provides a basis on which many future methods can build to decode the epigenomes of different organisms. © The Author(s) 2010. Published by Oxford University Press.
CITATION STYLE
Zheng, Y., Cohen-Karni, D., Xu, D., Chin, H. G., Wilson, G., Pradhan, S., & Roberts, R. J. (2010). A unique family of Mrr-like modification-dependent restriction endonucleases. Nucleic Acids Research, 38(16), 5527–5534. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkq327
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