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Faculty Profile
Address: Phone:
212-305-5331
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Research Summary DNA
Modification and the control of parasitic DNA in the mammalian genome. Transcription
of mammalian
genes is prevented by the methylation of cytosines within promoter
elements.
It was previously thought that reversible promoter methylation might be
involved in gene regulation during development, but recent data
indicate
that the primary function of DNA methylation is the suppression of
intragenomic
parasites and of proviral DNA. DNA methylation also has crucial roles
in
genomic imprinting and X chromosome inactivation in females. Transposons threaten the structure and orderly expression of the genome; they act only in their own interest and provide no benefit to the host. Mammals have developed a sophisticated nuclear host defense system that allows them to recognize and irreversibly inactivate nearly every transposon. Inactivation involves the attachment of methyl groups to the 5 position of cytosine residues by an enzyme called DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferase (Dnmt1). We were the first to purify this enzyme, to clone the gene that encodes it, and to use gene disruption technology to show that cytosine methylation is required for the normal development of mammals. More recently we have found that certain transposable elements show unrestrained activity when Dnmt1 is removed from mouse embryos, confirming our hypothetical host defense role for cytosine methylation. The
nuclear host
defense hypothesis has significance for human health in two important
areas.
First, a loss of cytosine methylation is almost always seen in human
cancer,
and cancer cells show a reduced capacity to control their transposable
elements. This is almost certainly involved in the genomic instability
characteristic of tumors cells. The ability to identify inborn
abnormalities
of the DNA methylating system would identify individuals at risk for
the
early development of cancer.
1. Bestor, T.H., Bourc'his, D. (2006). Genetics and epigenetics of hydatidiform moles. Nat. Genet. 38(3): 274-276. 2. Damelin, M. Bestor, T.H. (2006). Decatentation checkpoint deficiency destabilizes the stem cell genome. Cell Cycle, 5(4): 345-346. 3. Damelin, M., Ooi, S.K., Bestor, T.H. (2006). Combing over heritable gene silencing. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 13(2): 100-101. 4. Goll, M.G., Kirpekar, F., Maggert, K.A., Yoder, J.A., Hsieh, C.L., Zhang, X., Golic, K.G., Jacobsen, S.E., Bestor, T.H. (2006). Methylation of tRNAAsp by the DNA methyltransferase homolog Dnmt2. Science, 311(5759):395-398. 5. Bestor, T.H. (2005). Transposons reanimated in mice. Cell, 122(3): 322-325. 6. Goll, M.G., Bestor, T.H. (2005). Eukaryotic cytosine methyltransferases. Annu. Rev. Biochem. 74:481-514. 7. Bourc'his, D., Bestor, T.H. (2004). Meiotic catastrophe and retrotransposon reactivation in male germ cells lacking Dnmt3L. Nature, 431(7004):96-99.
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