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Catching RIP in the act. Part I: A PCR assay to detect DNA methylation. Paul Donegan Freitag Lab Biochemistry and Biophysics Department Oregon State University. Background. MUTAGENESIS : Mutations of base pairs in genetic material Induced by UV, X-ray, viruses, etc.
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Catching RIP in the act. Part I: A PCR assay to detect DNA methylation Paul Donegan Freitag Lab Biochemistry and Biophysics Department Oregon State University
Background • MUTAGENESIS: Mutations of base pairs in genetic material • Induced by UV, X-ray, viruses, etc. • Spontaneous occurrence • triggers DNA repair • Hypermutagenesis • Induced and controlled by cells • Not spontaneous --AID deaminase --ApoBec (HIV) --RIP
RIP = Repeat Induced Point Mutation Genomic defense mechanism Silences repetitive DNA (no expression) Targets duplicated DNA segments linked or unlinked sequences Induces C to T transition mutations Identical Sequences Mutated Sequences R I P RIP triggered by repeated sequence C to T point mutations induced by RIP GCATATCAGTCATGCTCAGCGCACCTA GCATATCAGTCATGCTCAGCGCACCTA GTATATCAGTTATGTTCAGTGCACTTTA GCATATTAGTTATGTTTAGCGCATTCTA
Relevance We are interested in RIP because we want to: • gain insights into evolutionary mechanisms that shape genomes. • understand genome defense mechanisms and mutagenesis.
Summer Research Objective • To differentiate between two possible molecular mechanism that can explain RIP Neurospora crassa Rosette of sexual spores, nuclei labelled with GFP
Possible Mechanisms for C to T Mutations caused by RIP (1) H3C METHYLATION DEAMINATION CMe C T Methyl Group Donor- S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) • Methylation by a specific cytosine DNA methyltransferase, followed by deamination
Possible Mechanisms for C to T Mutations caused by RIP (2) • Cytosine is never methylated but instead deaminated to uracil, which will be replaced with thymine by DNA replication or repair DEAMINATION z Enz U Intermediate C
RIP timeline FERTILIZATION • RIP occurs during the sexual cycle • RIP occurs after fertilization but before karyogamy. • ~10 mitotic divisions while RIP can occur. RIP ZONE! KARYOGAMY Image from: Shiu et al. (2001) Cell
Methylation Assay Timeline • DNA was extracted during the expected RIP timeframe • Methylation of interest should occur between fertilization and karyogamy (nuclear fusion). RIP ZONE (between fertilization and karyogamy) Controls Days of Interest 01 2 3 456 7 DAY
Digest with Sau3AI PCR after Digest Unmethylated site Methylated site GATC GATCme Methylation-sensitive vs. methylation-insensitive restriction enzymes: Sau3AI tests for cytosine methylation, based on the presence or absence of bands Digest PCR • DpnII is not sensitive to cytosine methylation: • -cuts regardless • -control (never amplifies) Bands cannot be amplified when site is cut
RFP Mutations in the RFP region • ‘tdimerRed’ has two identical segments that trigger RIP • integrated into the Neurospora genome (not in WT) • here, we look for DNA methylation induced by RIP • EVIDENCE OF METHYLATION SUGGESTS MECHANISM 1
Genomic DNA (Neurospora) Plasmid DNA RFP- RFP+ wild type RFP+ Primers: A B C A B C Primers: A B C A B C * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Experimental Control RFP amplification Primers 1+3 (A) and 2+3 (B) amplified RFP bands only from RFP+ strain Primers 5+6 (C) amplified control gene (hpo) Bands from 5/6 appear in all genomic DNA’s but are absent in both plasmids 1 * * 6 5 hpo 2 3 RFP region
BUT: Assay never worked with positive controls of methylated DNA hpo G S D G S D Positive control: Methylated region Negative control: Unmethylated region Expected band in S lane, but no band in D lane Expected no band in S or D lane 28 cycles 25 cycles 31 cycles G = genomic DNA, no digest S = Sau3AI, C-methylation sensitive D = DpnII, C-methylation insensitive
Catching RIP in the act.Part II: Tagging of duplicated DNA with fluorescent DNA binding proteins
Goals • Tag DNA of Neurospora crassa with fluorescent proteins: • to visualize pairing of duplications during RIP; • to track chromosome territory movement (e.g., centromeres, telomeres, nucleolar DNA, specific genes) • to track movements of DNA binding proteins from nucleus to nucleus • to target enzymes to specific regions on chromosomes
During RIP RFP GFP RFP GFP RFP GFP RFP GFP Protein tags Specific DNA binding proteins recognize target sequences (binding sites, BS). Tag = translational fusion of a DNA binding domain (DBD) to RFP or GFP. Binding sites recruit DBD-GFP or DBD-RFP fusion; co-localization = yellow. Tagging with RFP or GFP DBD DBD RFP GFP BS BS Protein Protein DNA DNA
Construction of protein tags Amplified DBD from Aspergillus AflR and AlcR by PCR 1 Generated translational fusions by cloning into gfp and rfp plasmids 2 Transformed E. coli 3 Purified plamids, digested DNA and confirmed correct plasmids 4 Linearized plasmid and transformed into Neurospora his-3 mutant 5 Selected His+ Neurospora transformants that showed fluorescence 6 AlcR-RFP AflR-GFP Fusion proteins localized in nuclei
Construction of DNA binding sites Binding site: DNA sequences specifically recognized by AflR or AlcR 2 AflR:TCGNNNNNCGA AlcR:GCGGRRCCGC Need 200+ copies of recognized sequence to bind enough fluorescent protein for visibility.
Summary PCR assay: Did not work in many attempts. We need a new approach. 1 DNA tagging: The protein tags are expressed, binding sites still needed. 2
Acknowledgements • HHMI (Howard Hughes Medical Institute) • URISC (Undergraduate Research, Innovation, Scholarship & Creativity) • Kevin Ahern • Michael Freitag • Kristina Smith • Freitag Lab