Abstract
Mammalian DNA methylation patterns are established by two de novo DNA methyltransferases, DNMT3A and DNMT3B, which exhibit both redundant and distinctive methylation activities. However, the related molecular basis remains undetermined. Through comprehensive structural, enzymology and cellular characterization of DNMT3A and DNMT3B, we here report a multi-layered substrate-recognition mechanism underpinning their divergent genomic methylation activities. A hydrogen bond in the catalytic loop of DNMT3B causes a lower CpG specificity than DNMT3A, while the interplay of target recognition domain and homodimeric interface fine-tunes the distinct target selection between the two enzymes, with Lysine 777 of DNMT3B acting as a unique sensor of the +1 flanking base. The divergent substrate preference between DNMT3A and DNMT3B provides an explanation for site-specific epigenomic alterations seen in ICF syndrome with DNMT3B mutations. Together, this study reveals distinctive substrate-readout mechanisms of the two DNMT3 enzymes, implicative of their differential roles during development and pathogenesis.
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Introduction
DNA methylation is one of the major epigenetic mechanisms that critically influence gene expression, genomic stability, and cell differentiation1,2,3. In mammals, DNA methylation predominantly occurs at the C-5 position of cytosine within the symmetric CpG dinucleotide, affecting ~70–80% of the CpG sites throughout the genome4. Mammalian DNA methylation patterns are mainly generated by two de novo DNA methyltransferases, DNMT3A and DNMT3B5. The catalytically inactive DNMT3-like protein (DNMT3L) has an important regulatory role in this process by acting as cofactor of DNMT3A or DNMT3B6,7,8. In addition to CpG methylation, DNMT3A and DNMT3B introduce non-CpG methylation (mainly CpA) in oocytes, embryonic stem (ES) cells, and neural cells4,9,10,11. The presence of non-CpG methylation was reported to correlate with transcriptional repression12,13 and the pluripotency-associated epigenetic state4,14, lending support for non-CpG methylation as an emerging epigenetic mark in defining tissue-specific patterns of gene expression, particularly in the brain.
DNMT3A and DNMT3B are closely related in amino acid sequence5, with a C-terminal methyltransferase (MTase) domain preceded by regulatory regions including a proline–tryptophan–tryptophan–proline (PWWP) domain and an ATRX–DNMT3–DNMT3L-type (ADD) zinc finger domain15,16. Previous studies have indicated a partial redundancy between the two enzymes in the establishment of methylation patterns across the genome5,17; however, a single knockout (KO) of either DNMT3A or DNMT3B resulted in embryonic or postnatal lethality, indicating their functional distinctions5,17,18,19. Indeed, it was shown that DNMT3A is critical for establishing methylation at major satellite repeats and allele-specific imprinting during gametogenesis8,17, whereas DNMT3B plays a dominant role in early embryonic development and in minor satellite repeat methylation5,17. Mutations of DNMT3A are prevalent in hematological cancers such as acute myeloid leukemia (AML)20 and occur in a developmental overgrowth syndrome21; in contrast, mutations of DNMT3B lead to the Immunodeficiency, centromeric instability, facial anomalies (ICF) syndrome5,22,23,24. Previous studies have indicated subtle mechanistic differences between DNMT3A and DNMT3B9,25,26,27,28, including their differential preference toward the flanking sequence of CpG target sites29,30,31,32. However, due to the limited number of different substrates investigated in these studies, global differences in substrate recognition of DNMT3A and DNMT3B remain elusive. Our recently reported crystal structure of the DNMT3A–DNMT3L heterotetramer in complex with CpG DNA33 revealed that the two central DNMT3A subunits bind to the same DNA duplex through a set of interactions mediated by protein motifs from the target recognition domain (TRD), the catalytic core and DNMT3A–DNMT3A homodimeric interface (also called RD interface below). However, the structural basis of DNMT3B-mediated methylation remains unclear.
To gain mechanistic understanding of de novo DNA methylation, we here report comprehensive enzymology, structural and cellular characterizations of DNMT3A- and DNMT3B-DNA complexes. Our results uncover their distinct substrate and flanking sequence preferences, implicating epigenomic alterations caused by DNMT3 mutations in diseases. Notably, we show that the catalytic core, TRD domain and RD interface cooperate in orchestrating a distinct, multi-layered substrate-readout mechanism between DNMT3A and DNMT3B, which impacts the establishment of CpG and non-CpG methylation patterns in cells.
Results
Deep enzymology analysis of DNMT3A and DNMT3B
To systematically elucidate the functional divergence of DNMT3A and DNMT3B, we have developed a deep enzymology workflow to study the substrate specificity of DNA MTases in random sequence context. In essence, we generated a pool of DNA substrates, in which the target CpG site is flanked by 10 random nucleotides on each side. Following methylation by the MTase domains of DNMT3A or DNMT3B, the reaction products were subjected to hairpin ligation, bisulfite conversion, PCR amplification, and next-generation sequencing (NGS) analysis (Supplementary Fig. 1 and Supplementary Table 1). Analysis of the base enrichments at all flank positions in the methylated sequences demonstrated that DNMT3A- and DNMT3B-mediated methylation is significantly influenced by the CpG-flanking sequence from the −2 to the +3 site (Fig. 1a). Based on this result, we focused on further analyzing the effect of the ±3 bp flanking positions on the activity of both enzymes. Methylation levels were averaged for all 4096 NNNCGNNN sites for the two experiments with DNMT3A and DNMT3B, revealing high bisulfite conversion (>99.5%) (Supplementary Table 1), high coverage of NNNCGNNN sites that was similar between DNMT3A and DNMT3B (Supplementary Fig. 2a–d) and a high correlation of average methylation levels for the different flanks between experimental repeats, yet different between DNMT3A and DNMT3B (Fig. 1b and Supplementary Fig. 2e). We then validated these observations by in vitro methylation analysis on 30-mer oligonucleotide substrates34 with CpG sites in different trinucleotide flanking sequence context, which reveals methylation preferences of both enzymes in strong agreement with the results from the NGS profile (Supplementary Fig. 3a, b).
Strikingly, the effect of flanking sequences on methylation rates of DNMT3A and DNMT3B is very pronounced showing NNNCGNNN flanks with very high and very low methylation in both datasets (Supplementary Table 2). Weblogo analysis of the most highly methylated sites revealed that DNMT3A shows a preference toward a CG(C/T) motif, whereas DNMT3B shows a higher activity toward a CG(G/A) motif (Fig. 1c). In addition, both enzymes prefer a T at the −2 flank site. To explore the differences between DNMT3A and DNMT3B systematically, we computed the ratio of the sequence preferences of DNMT3B and DNMT3A (Fig. 1d and Supplementary Data 1) designated as B/A preference from here on. Overall, these preference ratios span a more than 100-fold range, illustrating the large divergence in flanking sequence preferences between the two enzymes. These data provide a systematic survey of the substrate preferences of DNMT3A and DNMT3B and highlight their distinct enzymatic properties.
Genomic methylation introduced by DNMT3B and DNMT3A
To examine patterns of de novo DNA methylation induced by DNMT3A or DNMT3B in cells, we stably transduced either enzyme into mouse ES cells with compound knockout (TKO) of DNMT1, DNMT3A, and DNMT3B as carried out before (Supplementary Fig. 4a)33. Using liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC-MS)-based quantification, we detected a global increase in cytosine methylation in TKO cells after rescue with DNMT3B (Supplementary Fig. 4b), an effect similar to what was observed with DNMT3A rescue33. Next, we profiled the genome-wide methylation introduced by either DNMT3A or DNMT3B in cells by enhanced reduced representation bisulfite sequencing (eRRBS, two replicates per group; Supplementary Table 3) and generated datasets with high conversion rates (Supplementary Fig. 4c) and reproducibility between replicates (Supplementary Fig. 4d). To compare deep enzymology and eRRBS profiling results, average eRRBS methylation levels within the NNNCGNNN sequence contexts were computed from either DNMT3A- or DNMT3B-reconstituted cells, and the averaged eRRBS methylation levels in both samples were found to be high and equal in coverage (Supplementary Fig. 5a, b). The eRRBS methylation levels were then compared with the biochemical activities of DNMT3B and DNMT3A (Supplementary Fig. 5c). We found that the biochemical activity of DNMT3B correlated positively with the genomic methylation of DNMT3B, but not with the genomic methylation of DNMT3A; conversely, the biochemical activity of DNMT3A correlated with the genomic methylation of DNMT3A, but not with that of DNMT3B (Supplementary Fig. 5c and Supplementary Data 1). Hence, despite being based on different assay systems, eRRBS and in vitro methylation based analyses yielded consistent results, highlighting a strong effect of the flanking sequence on DNMT3B and DNMT3A activities in cells.
Methylation of repetitive sequences by DNMT3A and DNMT3B
We have further interrogated the biochemical B/A substrate preference with one of the best-characterized DNMT3B targets, the SatII repeats, methylation of which is lost in the ICF syndrome24. Toward this, we used the ATTCGATG consensus sequence of SatII repeats35 for analysis. Notably, the ATTCGATG sequence is ranked 131th among the 4096 possible NNNGCNNN sequences in the biochemical B/A preferences, where a low rank corresponds to high preference by DNMT3B (Fig. 1d). Next, by averaging the B/A preferences for the NNNCGNNN sequences, grouped by their similarity to the SatII sequence, we observed a strong correlation of the averaged B/A preferences with an increasing similarity to the SatII sequence, illustrating the adaptation of DNMT3B for SatII methylation (Fig. 1e). Furthermore, we assayed human DNMT3A- and DNMT3B-mediated methylation on 30-mer oligonucleotide substrates34 containing a CpG with either the SatII 6-bp flanking sequence (TCCATTCGATGATG) or a DNMT3B-disfavored reference substrate (AGGCGCCC, rank 4092 of 4096 in the B/A preference, Fig. 1d). Strikingly, DNMT3B showed an ~11-fold higher activity on the SatII substrate, whereas DNMT3A was ~15-fold more active on the reference substrate (Fig. 1f and Supplementary Fig. 6a, b). Similar enzymatic preferences were observed for mouse DNMT3A and DNMT3B (Supplementary Fig. 6c). These data confirm the specific activity of DNMT3B on the SatII targets and document a >100-fold difference in methylation rates of substrates with different flanking sequences by DNMT3B and DNMT3A.
We then analyzed the sequences of murine genomic repeats to determine the ranks of CpG-associated sequences in the sorted preferences of DNMT3A and DNMT3B. For this, only the more preferred DNA strand was considered, because DNMT1-mediated maintenance DNA methylation in cells would rapidly methylate hemimethylated CpG sites regardless of which DNA strand was initially methylated. This analysis reproduced the preference of DNMT3B for human SatII sequences, and remarkably mirrored genomic methylation data of DNMT3A and DNMT3B in mice17 where a pronounced preference of DNMT3B and DNMT3A was observed for minor satellite repeats and major satellite repeats, respectively, whereas both enzymes showed equal preferences for the IAP sequence (Fig. 1g and Supplementary Fig. 6d).
DNMT3A- and DNMT3B-mediated non-CpG methylation
Our deep enzymology and eRRBS studies have further allowed direct comparison between the DNMT3A- and DNMT3B-mediated CpG and CpH methylation. Intriguingly, analysis of the CpA/CpG ratio in the NNNCGNNN context for each enzyme reveals that the CpG specificity of DNMT3A is higher within a favored flanking sequence context, whereas in the case of DNMT3B, a preferable CpG-flanking context is correlated with a decreased CpG specificity and higher CpA methylation (Supplementary Fig. 6e, f), which is in line with the stronger correlation of flanking sequence profiles of CpG and CpA methylation for DNMT3B than for DNMT3A (Supplementary Fig. 6g). A targeted activity analysis revealed that the preference of DNMT3B for a G at the +1 site is strongly enhanced in non-CpG methylation, but not that of DNMT3A (Fig. 2a, b). Furthermore, our eRRBS-based methylome data (Supplementary Fig. 7) obtained from DNMT3A or DNMT3B-reconstituted TKO cells also revealed most efficient CpH methylation of sequences containing C or G at the +1 site, respectively (Fig. 2c, d) in agreement with the activity data and previously published cellular methylation data4,36,37,38,39,40. Together, these data provide a direct link between the intrinsic substrate specificities of DNMT3s and the DNA methylation patterns in cells.
Crystal structures of the DNMT3B–DNMT3L–CpG DNA complexes
To gain a mechanistic understanding of the enzymatic divergence between DNMT3A and DNMT3B, we generated the complexes of DNMT3B–DNMT3L, formed by the MTase domain of human DNMT3B and the C-terminal domain of human DNMT3L, with two different Zebularine (Z)-containing DNA duplexes harboring two ZpGpA or ZpGpT sites as mimics of CGA and CGT motifs, which are separated by 14 bps (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Fig. 8a–c). The structures of the DNMT3B–DNMT3L–CGA DNA (DNMT3B–CGA) and DNMT3B–DNMT3L–CGT DNA (DNMT3B–CGT) bound to the cofactor product S-Adenosyl-L-homocysteine (SAH) were both solved at 3.0 Å resolution (Supplementary Table 4). The two structures are very similar, with a root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) of 0.27 Å over 828 Cα atoms (Supplementary Fig. 8d). For simplification, we choose the DNMT3B–CGA complex for structural analysis, unless indicated otherwise. Similar to the DNMT3A–DNMT3L complexes33,41,42, the DNMT3B–DNMT3L–DNA complex reveals a linear heterotetrameric arrangement of DNMT3L–DNMT3B–DNMT3B–DNMT3L (Fig. 3b).
The interaction between DNMT3B and DNA involves a loop from the catalytic core (catalytic loop: residues 648–672), a loop from the TRD (TRD loop: residues 772–791), and a segment in the homodimeric interface of DNMT3B, known as the RD interface in DNMT3A42 (RD: residues 822–828) (Fig. 3c–e and Supplementary Fig. 8e, f). Each Zebularine (Z5/Z20′) is flipped into the active site of one DNMT3B subunit, where it is anchored through a covalent linkage with the catalytic cysteine C651 and hydrogen-bonding interactions with other catalytic residues (Fig. 3b). The cavities vacated by the base flipping of Z5/Z20′ are occupied by the side chains of V657 (Fig. 3c). The orphan guanine (G5′/G20) that originally paired with Z5/Z20′ is stabilized by a hydrogen bond between the backbone carbonyl group of V657 and the Gua-N2 atom (Fig. 3c), while the ZpG guanine (G6/G19′) is recognized by a hydrogen bond between the side chain of N779 and the Gua-O6 atom, as well as a water-mediated hydrogen bond between the side chain of T775 and the Gua-N7 atom (Fig. 3d). Both guanines also engage van der Waals contacts with catalytic-loop residue P659 (Fig. 3c). Aside from the CpG recognition, N779 forms a hydrogen bond with the T7′-O4 atom (Fig. 3d), suggestive of a role in recognizing the nucleotides at the +1 flank position. Furthermore, residues on the catalytic loop (N652 and S655), the TRD loop (Q772, T773, T776, K782, and K785) and the RD interface (R823 and G824) interact with the DNA backbone on both strands through hydrogen-bonding or electrostatic interactions (Fig. 3c–e and Supplementary Fig. 8e, f). Note that DNMT3L does not make any contact with the DNA (Fig. 3b), as previously observed for the DNMT3A–DNMT3L–DNA complex33 and it did not show strong effects on the flanking sequence preferences of DNMT3A or DNMT3B (Supplementary Fig. 9).
Guided by the structural analysis, we selected a number of DNA-interacting residues of DNMT3B for mutagenesis and enzymatic assays. In comparison with wild-type (WT) DNMT3B, mutation of the catalytic-loop residues (S655A, V657G, N658S, and P659A), RD residue (R823P), and the TRD-loop residues (T775A, T776A, and K782A) led to a modest to severe decrease in the enzymatic activity (Fig. 3f), particularly for V657G, T775A, T776A, and K782A, supporting the notion that these residues are important for DNMT3B-substrate recognition and catalysis. Note that two of these mutations, N658S and R823P, are associated with ICF syndrome26,43, which reinforces the etiologic link between DNMT3B and the ICF syndrome.
Role of the catalytic loop in defining CpG specificity
Structural alignments of the DNMT3B–CGA and DNMT3B–CGT complexes with the DNMT3A–CGT complex (PDB 5YX2) give an RMSD of 0.62 and 0.63 Å over 853 and 863 aligned Cα atoms, respectively (Supplementary Fig. 10a), in line with the ~80% sequence identity between the MTase domains of DNMT3A and DNMT3B (Supplementary Fig. 10b). Nevertheless, a notable conformational difference is observed for the catalytic loop (Fig. 4a): A side-chain hydrogen bond is formed between DNMT3B N656 and R661 (Fig. 4b), but not between the corresponding DNMT3A residues I715 and R720 (Fig. 4c). Such a conformational difference presumably leads to altered dynamic behavior of the catalytic loop, as demonstrated by the subtle conformational repositioning of the CpG-contacting residues in DNMT3B, such as V657 and P659, relative to their DNMT3A counterparts (Fig. 4a).
Our NGS analysis revealed an about two-fold higher level of non-CpG methylation for DNMT3B when compared with DNMT3A (Fig. 4d), consistent with previous reports on their differential CpG/CpA specificity25,28. To examine whether the conformational divergence between the catalytic loops of DNMT3A and DNMT3B impact their CpG specificities, we measured the enzymatic activities of DNMT3A and DNMT3B, WT and mutants, on a DNA duplex containing either (GAC)12, (AAC)12, or (TAC)12 repeats. Consistent with the NGS analysis, WT DNMT3B shows 2–4-fold lower CpG/CpA and CpG/CpT specificities than WT DNMT3A (Fig. 4e and Supplementary Fig. 11). Strikingly, swapping this DNMT3B-specific H-bond inverted the CpG specificities of DNMT3A and DNMT3B: the DNMT3B N656I mutation increased the CpG specificity by 2.0–1.1-fold, whereas the DNMT3A I715N mutation decreased the CpG specificity by 1.7–1.2-fold (Fig. 4e and Supplementary Fig. 11). Consistently, our eRRBS-based methylome data obtained from the WT and N656I-reconstituted TKO cells (two replicates per group; Supplementary Fig. 12a–c and Supplementary Table 3) show that, the DNMT3B N656I mutant displayed a ~2.6- and 1.4-fold decrease in the relative activity for CpA/CpG and CpT/CpG, respectively, when compared with WT DNMT3B (Fig. 4f). Together, these data suggest that the divergent conformational dynamics of the catalytic loop attributes to the differential CpG/CpH specificities of DNMT3A and DNMT3B.
Divergence between the DNMT3A and DNMT3B RD interfaces
Comparison of the DNMT3B–DNA and DNMT3A–DNA complexes reveals a marked difference in the DNA conformation: In comparison with the DNMT3A-bound DNA, the DNMT3B-bound DNA shows a sharper kink of the central segment arching over the RD interface, bending further away from the protein (Supplementary Fig. 10a). This conformational difference reflects the distinct protein–DNA contacts on a weakly conserved segment of the RD interface (residues G822-K828 of DNMT3B and S881-R887 of DNMT3A; Supplementary Fig. 10b): While in the DNMT3B complex only R823 and G824 form hydrogen bonds with DNA residues, in the DNMT3A complex, S881, R882, L883, and R887 all engage hydrogen bonding or van der Waals contacts with the DNA backbone, explaining the closer approach of the DNA to the protein in the DNMT3A complex (Fig. 4g, h). Along the line, mutation of G822, G824, and K828 in DNMT3B into their corresponding residues in DNMT3A resulted in a markedly reduced preference toward the SatII substrate (Fig. 4i and Supplementary Fig. 13), indicating that the differential flanking sequence preferences of DNMT3B and DNMT3A and the preference of DNMT3B for the SatII target are partially encoded in the DNA-contacting residues in the RD interface.
Crystal structure of the DNMT3B–CAG complex
To gain insight into the structural basis of DNMT3B-mediated CpA methylation, we also determined the crystal structure of DNMT3B–DNMT3L tetramer covalently bound to a DNA duplex containing two CAG motifs (DNMT3B–CAG complex) (Fig. 5a, b). The structure of the DNMT3B–CAG complex resembles that of the DNMT3B–CpG complexes with subtle conformational differences: the replacement of the CpG dinucleotide with CpA leads to the loss of the base-specific contacts of N779 with the bases next to the methylation site (Fig. 5c), as well as a reduced packing between the A6 base and the catalytic loop (Fig. 5d, e). On the other hand, K777 forms a side-chain hydrogen bond with the N7 atom of G7 (Fig. 5c), providing an explanation for DNMT3B’s preference for a G at the +1 site in the context of non-CpG DNA. In addition, the water-mediated hydrogen bond between DNMT3B T775 and the N7 atom of G6, observed in the DNMT3B–CGA complex (Fig. 3d), and in the corresponding sites of the DNMT3A–DNA complex33, is preserved in the DNMT3B–CpA DNA complex now involving the N7 atom of A6 (Fig. 5c), which may contribute to the fact that CpA represents the next most favorable methylation site of DNMT3B and DNMT3A, following CpG.
DNMT3B K777 recognizes the +1 flanking nucleotide
Our previous study on the DNMT3A–DNA complex revealed that a hydrogen bond formed between residues R882 and S837 of DNMT3A provides an intramolecular link between the RD interface and the TRD loop upon DNA binding (Fig. 6a)33. Interestingly, this interaction is abolished in DNMT3B, because R823 adopts a different conformation and DNA-binding mode than its DNMT3A counterpart R882 (Fig. 6b). Accordingly, the TRD loops of DNMT3B and DNMT3A adopt distinct side-chain conformations for CpG recognition (Fig. 6c): In the DNMT3A–CGT complex, R836 donates a hydrogen bond to the Gua6-O6 atom, whereas the corresponding residue K777 in DNMT3B points toward the +1 flanking nucleotide; instead, in the DNMT3B–CpG complexes the Gua6-O6 atom receives a hydrogen bond from N779, unlike the corresponding N838 in the DNMT3A–CGT complex that does not make any base-specific contact with the CpG site (Fig. 6a, c)33. Structural comparison of the three DNMT3B–CpA/CpG complexes reveals distinct major groove environments and side-chain conformations of K777 (Fig. 6d–i and Supplementary Fig. 14a–c): in the DNMT3B–CAG complex, K777 is oriented toward the +1 nucleotide G7 to form a base-specific hydrogen bond, as described above, as well as an electrostatic interaction with the backbone phosphate of G7 (Fig. 6e); likewise, in the DNMT3B–CGA complex, K777 points toward A7 to engage van der Waals contacts and a water-mediated hydrogen bond with the DNA backbone (Fig. 6g); in contrast, in the DNMT3B–CGT complex, in which A7 was replaced by thymine, the side chain of K777 moves away from the DNA backbone, presumably resulting from the reduction in major groove depth by the base ring of T7 (Fig. 6i, j). These observations suggest that DNMT3B K777 reads a combined feature of shape and polarity of the +1 flanking base, distinct from its counterpart in DNMT3A (R836), which recognizes the CpG site in the CGT complex directly through hydrogen-bonding interactions (Fig. 6a)33. To further determine the role of DNMT3B K777 in DNA recognition, we generated the K777A-mutated DNMT3B–DNMT3L tetramer in complex with the CGT DNA and determined its structure at 2.95 Å resolution (Supplementary Fig. 14d). The K777A structure aligns well with that of the WT DNMT3B–CGT complex (Supplementary Fig. 14d), but exhibits a subtle conformational change along the G6-T7 step: in comparison with the WT DNMT3B–CGT complex, the T7 base in the K777A DNMT3B–CGT complex undergoes a slide movement toward the major groove, further reducing the groove depth around the +1 site (Fig. 6k, l). Consequently, the G6-T7 step appears to engage a stronger base-stacking interaction in the K777A DNMT3B–CGT complex (Fig. 6m) than in the WT DNMT3B–CGT complex (Fig. 6n). It is worth mentioning that the hydrogen bond between DNMT3B N779 and the CpG site is unaltered by the K777A mutation (Supplementary Fig. 14e, f). Likewise, structural comparison of the previously reported WT and R836A-mutated DNMT3A–CGT complexes33 reveals that introduction of the R836A mutation does not lead to a conformational change of neighboring N838 (Supplementary Fig. 14g). These data suggest that the conformational divergence between the TRD loops of DNMT3A and DNMT3B in the CGT complexes is unlikely attributed to the R-to-K change at the DNMT3B R836 and DNMT3A K777 sites. Together, these structural studies reveal a distinct interplay of the RD interface and TRD loop between DNMT3A and DNMT3B, suggesting a role of DNMT3B K777 in shaping the preference of DNMT3B toward the flanking sequence of the CpG site.
DNMT3B K777 mediates the +1 flank site preference of DNMT3B
To analyze the effect of K777 on the substrate preference of DNMT3B, we measured the enzymatic activities of DNMT3B–DNMT3L WT and mutants on hemimethylated DNAs containing unmethylated (GTC)12 or (GAC)12 on one strand while methylated (GAmC)12 or (GTmC)12 on the complimentary strand, referred to as CGT and CGA DNAs, respectively. WT DNMT3B shows a ~2-fold preference for CGA DNA over CGT DNA (Fig. 7a); in contrast, the K777A mutant shows increased methylation for both CGT and CGA DNA, but with preference for CGT over CGA (Fig. 7a), which likely arises from the altered base-stacking interaction between the +1 base and the CpG guanine (Fig. 6m, n). The N779A mutation led to reduced activity toward CGA (Fig. 7a), but not CGT, consistent with its role in contacting the +1 T on the non-target strand in the CGA complex (Fig. 3d). Likewise, our NGS analysis reveals that the pronounced preference of DNMT3B for non-CpG methylation at sites flanked by G at the +1 site was completely lost in K777A, which instead showed a preference for T at this site in both CpG and non-CpG context (Fig. 7b). Finally, we have compared the cellular methylation profiles obtained from TKO cells reconstituted with WT versus K777A-mutated DNMT3B (two replicates per group, see Supplementary Table 5 and Supplementary Fig. 15a–e). Similar to the in vitro analysis, the K777A mutation led to a G-to-T preference change at the +1 flanking site in all sequence contexts, relative to WT DNMT3B (Fig. 2d, 7c). In contrast, eRRBS analysis of TKO cells reconstituted with the N779A mutant (Supplementary Table 5 and Supplementary Fig. 15a–e) showed that this mutant retained a preference for a G at the +1 flanking site in the context of non-CpG DNA, resembling what was observed for WT DNMT3B (Fig. 2d, 7d). Nevertheless, the N779A mutation led to a modest decrease in the CpG specificity in vitro and in cells (Supplementary Fig. 16a–c), in line with its role in CpG recognition. These findings establish that K777 of DNMT3B functions as a crucial determinant sensing different sequence contexts flanking the methylation site, which is distinctive from what was observed for DNMT3A.
Discussion
The functional interplay between DNMT3A and DNMT3B is critical for the dynamic programming of epigenetic regulation in development and disease. Through comprehensive structural, biochemical and enzymatic characterizations of DNMT3B and DNMT3A in CpG and non-CpG methylation, this study provides a detailed insight into the DNMT3B- and DNMT3A-mediated de novo methylation, explaining their distinct functionalities in cells.
The deep enzymology approach developed in this study, combined with the eRRBS-based cellular methylome profiling, allowed high-resolution characterization of the flanking sequence preferences of DNMT3A and DNMT3B, which manifest >100-fold different methylation rates of CpG sites across different sequence contexts. Importantly, our data demonstrate that the enzymatic divergence between DNMT3A and DNMT3B contributes to their differential activities on SatII repeats, providing one molecular explanation for why hypomethylation of SatII sequences is strongly connected with DNMT3B mutations, and DNMT3A cannot compensate for a lack of DNMT3B activity. The flanking sequence preferences of DNMT3A and DNMT3B also explain the previously observed preferences of both enzymes in mouse ES cells, where DNMT3B methylates minor satellite repeats and DNMT3A methylates major satellite repeats17.
Importantly, this study reveals a multi-layered substrate-recognition mechanism. First, the formation of a specific H-bond in the catalytic loop of DNMT3B gives rises to a reduced CpG/CpH specificity in DNMT3B, likely due to a conformational stabilization effect. Second, the different protein–DNA interactions at the RD interface of DNMT3B and DNMT3A diversify their intramolecular interaction between the RD interface and TRD, which triggers changes in the side-chain conformations of TRD-loop residues, including DNMT3B K777, S778, and N779, leading to a distinct TRD-DNA interaction of DNMT3B. Third, this study reveals a role of the TRD loop in fine-tuning substrate readout of DNMT3B. Strikingly, K777 undergoes significant side-chain conformational changes in response to changes in the major groove environments caused by different +1 bases, providing a mechanism for readout of +1 nucleotides by DNMT3B. This base shape-directed readout of the +1 flanking site by DNMT3B K777 on one hand may reduce the requirement for the N779-CpG contact when the CpG substrate is in a “favorable” flanking sequence context, on the other hand, shifts the preference of DNMT3B toward G at the +1 site on non-CpG substrates. This study therefore adds another example to the growing family of DNA-interacting proteins that recognizes the DNA shape as a readout mechanism44.
This study provides the molecular basis underlying the sequence preferences of DNMT3A and DNMT3B on the +1 flanking site. How other flanking sites (e.g., the −2 site, in which a preference toward T was observed for both DNMT3A and DNMT3B) affect DNMT3A- and DNMT3B-mediated methylation remains to be determined. It is also worth mentioning that the genomic targeting of DNMT3A and DNMT3B in cells are further regulated by additional factors, including their N-terminal domains and DNMT3L. For instance, a previous study has demonstrated that DNMT3L modulates cellular de novo methylation activities through focusing the DNA methylation machineries on well-chromatinized DNA templates32. In addition, despite that structural analysis of both DNMT3B–DNA and DNMT3A–DNA complexes reveals that DNMT3L does not directly engage in the DNA interaction, the role of DNMT3L in stimulating the enzymatic activity and/or stability of DNMT3A and DNMT3B has been well established6,7,8,42,45, which may attenuate the impact of the intrinsic sequence specificities of these enzymes on the landscape of DNA methylation32. How the intrinsic preferences of DNMT3A and DNMT3B interplay with other cellular factors in regulating genomic DNA methylation awaits further investigation.
Methods
Protein expression and purification
The MTase domains of human DNMT3B (residues 562–853 of NCBI accession NM_006892) or DNMT3A (residues 628–912 of NCBI accession NM_022552) were co-expressed with the C-terminal domain of human DNMT3L (residues 178–386 of NCBI accession NM_175867) on a modified pRSFDuet-1 vector (Novagen), in which the DNMT3B or DNMT3A sequence was preceded by a hexahistidine (His6) and SUMO tag. The Escherichia coli BL21 DE3 (RIL) cell strains transformed with the DNMT3A- or DNMT3B-expression plasmids were first grown at 37 °C, but shifted to 16 °C after induction by IPTG at an OD600 (optical density at 600 nm) of 0.8. The cells continued to grow overnight. The His6-SUMO-tagged DNMT3B or DNMT3A fusion proteins in complex with DNMT3L were purified using a Ni2+-NTA column. Subsequently, the His6-SUMO tag was removed through Ubiquitin-like-specific protease 1 (ULP1) cleavage, followed by ion exchange chromatography using a Heparin HP column (GE Healthcare) and further purification through size-exclusion chromatography on a HiLoad 16/600 Superdex 200 pg column (GE Healthcare) in a buffer containing 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 100 mM NaCl, 0.1% β-mercaptoethanol, and 5% glycerol. Purified protein samples were stored in −80 °C for future use. For DNMT3-alone methylation experiments the catalytic domains of murine DNMT3A (residues 608–908 of NM_001271753) and DNMT3B (residues 558–859 of NM_001271744) were expressed and purified as described26,46.
To generate the covalent protein–DNA complex, a 25-mer Zebularine-containing DNA (CGA: 5′-CAT GZG ATC TAA TTA GAT CGC ATGG-3′, CGT: 5′-GCA TGZ GTT CTA ATT AGA ACG CATG-3′, CAG: 5′-CAT GZA GTC TAA TTA GAC TGC ATGG-3′, Z: zebularine) was self-annealed and incubated with WT or mutant DNMT3B–DNMT3L in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 20% glycerol, and 40 mM DTT at room temperature. The reaction products were further purified through a HiTrap Q XL column (GE Healthcare), followed by size-exclusion chromatography on a HiLoad 16/600 Superdex 200 pg column. The purified covalent protein–DNA complexes were concentrated to about 0.1–0.2 mM using Ultracel®-10 K Centrifugal Filters (Millipore) in a buffer containing 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 100 mM NaCl, 0.1% β-mercaptoethanol, and 5% glycerol.
Crystallization and structure determination
The crystals of covalent complexes of WT or mutant DNMT3B–DNMT3L–DNA complexes were generated by the hanging-drop vapor-diffusion method at 4 °C from drops mixed from 0.5 μL of the protein solution and 0.5 μL of precipitation solution containing 0.1 M Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 200 mM MgCl2, 8% PEG4000 and 0.2 mM AdoHcy. Crystals for the DNMT3B–DNMT3L tetramer in complex with the CGT were generated by the hanging-drop vapor-diffusion method at 16 °C, from drops mixed from 0.5 μL of DNMT3B–DNMT3L–DNA solution and 0.5 μL of precipitant solution containing 0.1 M Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 100 mM MgCl2, 7% PEG8000 and 0.2 mM AdoHcy. All crystals were soaked in cryo-protectant made of the precipitation solution supplemented with 25% glycerol, before flash frozen in liquid nitrogen for X-ray data collection. The X-ray diffraction datasets for the DNMT3B-DNMT3L–DNA complexes were collected at selenium peak wavelength on the BL 5.0.1 or BL 5.0.2 beamlines at the Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The diffraction data were indexed, integrated, and scaled using the HKL 2000 program47. The structures of the complexes were solved by molecular replacement method using PHASER48, with the structure of DNMT3A–DNMT3L–DNA complex (PDB 5YX2) as a search model. Further modeling of the covalent DNMT3B–DNMT3L–DNA complexes was performed using COOT49 and subjected to refinement using the PHENIX software package50. The same R-free test set was used throughout the refinement. The statistics for data collection and structural refinement of the productive covalent DNMT3B–DNMT3L–DNA complexes are summarized in Supplementary Table 4. The structural figures were generated using the pymol software (https://pymol.org/2/).
In vitro DNA methylation assays
DNA methylation kinetics shown in Figs. 3f, 4e, 7a, and Supplementary Fig. 16c were conducted using the C-terminal domains of DNMT3A–DNMT3L or DNMT3B–DNMT3L. A 20 μL reaction mixture contained 0.75 µM DNA, 0.3 µM DNMT3B–DNMT3L or DNMT3A–DNMT3L tetramer, 2.5 μM S-adenosyl-L-[methyl-3H]methionine (specific activity 18 Ci/mmol, PerkinElmer) in 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 0.05% β-mercaptoethanol, 5% glycerol and 200 μg/mL BSA. The DNA methylation assays were carried out in triplicate at 37 °C for 40 min before being quenched by addition of 5 µL of 10 mM unlabeled SAM. For detection, 12.5 µL of reaction mixture was spot on DEAE Filtermat paper (PerkinElmer) and dried. The DEAE paper was then washed sequentially with 3 × 5 mL of cold 0.2 M ammonium bicarbonate, 5 mL of Milli Q water, and 5 mL of ethanol. The DEAE paper was air dried and transferred to scintillation vials filled with 5 mL of ScintiVerse (Fisher). The radioactivity of tritium was measured with a Beckman LS6500 counter.
For experimental validation of the SatII preference of DNMT3B, the 6-bp SatII flanking sequence (TCCATTCGATGATG) was integrated into a regular 30-mer CpG substrate. As reference the AGGCGCCC substrate which is highly disfavored by DNMT3B was used and embedded in the same overall sequence context. Both substrates were used with a hemimethylated CpG site with methylation in lower strand and with a fully methylated CpG site. In each case, the activity observed with the fully methylated substrate was subtracted from the activity detected with the hemimethylated substrate to specifically determine the methylation of the target CpG in the upper DNA strand30,51.
DNA methylation kinetics shown in Figs. 1f, 4i, and Supplementary Figs. 3, 6a–c, 13 were measured using 1 µM biotinylated double-stranded 30-mer oligonucleotides containing a single CpG site basically as described51. Using a standard substrate GAG AAG CTG GGA CTT CCG GGA GGA GAG TGC34, flanking sequences selected to be preferred or disfavored by DNMT3A and DNMT3B were inserted as described in the text and figure legends. In all substrates, the lower DNA strand was biotinylated. To study the specific methylation of one CpG site in one DNA strand, each different oligonucleotide substrate was used in hemimethylated form and with the central CpG site in fully methylated form and the methylation rate observed with the fully methylated substrate was subtracted from the rate observed with corresponding the hemimethylated one. DNA methylation was measured by the incorporation of tritiated methyl groups from radioactively labeled SAM (PerkinElmer) into the biotinylated substrate using an avidin–biotin methylation plate assay46. The methylation reactions were carried out in methylation buffer (20 mM HEPES pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 50 mM KCl, 0.05 mg/ml bovine serum albumin) at 37 °C using 2 µM WT or mutant DNMT3A or DNMT3B catalytic domain. The reactions were started by adding 0.76 µM radioactively labeled SAM. The initial slope of the enzymatic reaction was determined by linear regression. In Fig. 4i, as reference substrate a biotinylated 509-mer DNA containing 58 CpG sites was used at a concentration of 100 nM46,51.
Deep enzymology experiments
Single-stranded DNA oligonucleotides used for generation of double-stranded substrates with CpH or methylated CpG sites embedded in a 10 nucleotide random context were obtained from IDT. The second strand synthesis was conducted by a primer extension reaction using one universal primer. The obtained mix of double-stranded DNA oligonucleotides was methylated by murine DNMT3A or DNMT3B catalytic domain for 60 min at 37 °C in the presence of 0.8 mM S-adenosyl-L-methionine (Sigma) in reaction buffer (20 mM HEPES pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 50 mM KCl, 0.05 mg/mL bovine serum albumin). Reactions were stopped by shock freezing in liquid nitrogen, then treated with proteinase K for 2 h. Afterward, the DNA was digested with the BsaI-HFv2 enzyme and a hairpin was ligated using T4 DNA ligase (NEB). The DNA was bisulfite-converted using EZ DNA Methylation-Lightning kit (ZYMO RESEARCH) according to the manufacturer protocol, purified and eluted with 10 µL ddH2O.
Libraries for Illumina Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) were produced with the two-step PCR approach. In the first PCR, 2 µL of bisulfite-converted DNA were amplified with the HotStartTaq DNA Polymerase (QIAGEN) and primers containing internal barcodes using following conditions: 15 min at 95 °C, 10 cycles of 30 s at 94 °C, 30 s at 50 °C, 1 min and 30 s at 72 °C, and final 5 min at 72 °C; using a mixture containing 1x PCR Buffer, 1x Q-Solution, 0.2 mM dNTPs, 0.05 U/µL HotStartTaq DNA Polymerase, 0.4 µM forward and 0.4 µM reverse primers in a total volume of 20 µL. In the second PCR, 1 µL of obtained products were amplified by Phusion Polymerase (Thermo) with another set of primers to introduce adapters and indices needed for NGS (30 s at 98 °C, 10 cycles—10 s at 98 °C, 40 s at 72 °C, and 5 min at 72 °C). PCRII was carried out in 1x Phusion HF Buffer, 0.2 mM dNTPs, 0.02 U/µL Phusion HF DNA Polymerase, 0.4 µM forward and 0.4 µM reverse primers in a total volume of 20 µL. Obtained libraries were pooled in equimolar amounts and purified using NucleoSpin® Gel and PCR Clean-up kit (Macherey-Nagel), followed by a second purification step of gel extraction and size exclusion with AMPure XP magnetic beads (Beckman Coulter). Sequencing was performed at the Max Planck Genome Centre Cologne.
Bioinformatics analysis of obtained NGS data was conducted with the tools available on the Usegalaxy.eu server52 and with home written programs. Briefly, fastq files were analyzed by FastQC, 3′ ends of the reads with a quality lower than 20 were trimmed and reads containing both full-length sense and antisense strands were selected. Next, using the information of both strands of the bisulfite-converted substrate the original DNA sequence and methylation state of both CpG sites was reconstituted. CpH and CpN data were split into CpG, CpA, CpT, and CpC, as appropriate. In each case average methylation levels of each NNCGNN and NNNCGNNN site were determined. Pearson correlation factors were calculated using Excel. Each experiment was performed in two independent repeats. For downstream analysis, DNMT3A data of repeat 1 and the combined data of DNMT3B were used for further analysis, based on their comparable methylation levels. Sequence logos were calculated using Weblogo 3 (http://weblogo.threeplusone.com/).
Plasmids
The plasmid that contains the isoform 1 of human DNMT3B (DNMT3B1) was purchased from Addgene (cat # 35522). The DNMT3B1 cDNA was then fused to an N-terminal Flag tag by PCR, followed by subcloning into the pPyCAGIZ vector33 (a gift of J. Wang). The pPyCAGIZ construct was generated for expression of the isoform 1 of human DNMT3A (DNMT3A1)33. Point mutation was generated by a QuikChange II XL Site-Directed Mutagenesis Kit (Agilent). All plasmid sequences were verified by sequencing before use.
Cell lines and tissue culture
The mouse embryonic stem cell line lacking DNMTs (Dnmt1−/− Dnmt3a−/− Dnmt3b−/− or TKO-ESCs; a gift from Dr. M. Okano) were cultivated on gelatin-coated dishes in the high-glucose DMEM base medium (Invitrogen) supplemented with 15% of fetal bovine serum (FBS, Invitrogen), 1x nonessential amino acids (Invitrogen), 0.1 mM of β-mercaptoethanol, and 1000 units/mL of leukemia inhibitory factor (ESGRO). 3KO-ESCs were transfected by Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) with the pPyCAGIZ empty vector or that carrying WT DNMT3A1, WT DNMT3B1 or its mutant. Transduced ES cells were selected in culture medium with 50 μg/mL Zeocin (Invitrogen) for over 2 weeks, following by establishment of pooled stable-expression cell lines and independent single-cell-derived clonal lines as described before33.
Antibodies and western blotting
Antibodies used for immunoblotting include DNMT3B (Santa Cruz Bio., G-9: sc-376043; 1:2000), DNMT3A (Abcam ab2850; 1:2000), and α-Tubulin (Sigma; 1:5000). Total protein samples were prepared by cell lysis with SDS-containing Laemmli sample buffer followed by brief sonication. Extracted samples equivalent to 100,000 cells were loaded to the SDS-PAGE gels for western blot analysis.
Quantification of 5-methyl-2′-deoxycytidine in genomic DNA
Genomic DNA was enzymatically digested into nucleoside mixtures, and the enzymes were removed by chloroform extraction. The samples were concentrated and subjected to LC-MS/MS and LC-MS/MS/MS analysis for quantifications of 5-mdC and dG, respectively. The amounts of 5-mdC and dG were calculated based on area ratios of peaks in selected-ion chromatograms (SICs) for the analytes over their corresponding isotope-labeled standards, the amounts of the labeled standards added (in moles) and the calibration curves. The final levels of 5-mdC were calculated by comparing the moles of 5-mdC relative to those of dG.
eRRBS and data analysis
eRRBS analysis of different cell samples was carried out in parallel to generate datasets for across-sample comparisons (such as WT DNMT3A1 versus DNMT3B1, or WT vs. mutant). Specifically, eRRBS was performed after DNA cleavage with restriction enzymes of MspI, BfaI, and MseI as described before33, followed by deep sequencing with an Illuminia sequencer (High Throughput Genomic Sequencing Facility [HTSF], UNC at Chapel Hill). For data analysis, general quality control checks were performed with FastQC v0.11.2 (http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/fastqc/). The last 5 bases were clipped from the 3′ end of every read due to questionable base quality in this region, followed by filtration of the sequences to retain only those with average base quality scores of more than 20. Examination of the 5′ ends of the sequenced reads indicated that 70–90% (average 83.0%) were consistent with exact matches to the expected restriction enzyme sites (i.e., MspI, BfaI, and MseI). Approximately 85% of both ends were consistent with the expected enzyme sites. Adapter sequence was trimmed from the 3′ end of reads via Cutadapt v1.2.1 (parameters -a AGATCGGAAGAG -O 5 -q 0 -f fastq; https://doi.org/10.14806/ej.17.1.200). Reads shorter than 30 nt after adapter-trimming were discarded. Filtered and trimmed datasets were aligned via Bismark v0.18.1 (parameters -X 1000 -non_bs_mm)53 using Bowtie v1.254 as the underlying alignment tool. The reference genome index contained the genome sequence of enterobacteria phage λ (NC_001416.1) in addition to the mm10 reference assembly (GRCm38). For all mapped read pairs, the first 4 bases at the 5′ end of read1 and the first 2 bases at the 5′ end of read2 were clipped due to positional methylation bias, as determined from QC plots generated with the ‘bismark_methylation_extractor’ tool (Bismark v0.18.1). To avoid bias in quantification of methylation status, any redundant mapped bases due to overlapping read ends from the same read pair were trimmed. Read pairs in which either read end had 3 more or methylated cytosines in non-CpG context were assumed to have escaped bisulfite conversion and were discarded. Finally, mapped read pairs were separated by genome (mm10 or phage λ). Read pairs mapped to phage λ were used as a QC assessment to confirm that the observed bisulfite conversion rate was >99%. Read pairs mapped to the mm10 reference genome were used for downstream analysis. Although the eRRBS data does carry stranded information, data from the plus and minus strands have been collapsed in this analysis.
Calling of methylated cytosine was performed with Bismark. The non-conversion rates of produced eRRBS datasets were all <0.3% and the statistical significance of methylation at each C site was assessed by binomial testing as described33. Following initial analysis of each individual dataset, results from the replicated eRRBS experiments that show good correlation were then combined for following analysis, with only those sites with a coverage of 10 reads or more used to determine the averaged methylation plots shown in main figures.
External datasets
Publically available database entries used in this study: M. musculus minor satellite DNA: Genebank Z22168.1, Mus musculus isolate 022 major satellite repeat sequence: EF028077.1, Mus musculus endogenous virus intracisternal A-particle: AF303453.1, Enterobacteria phage lambda, complete genome: NC_001416.1, human DNMT3B: NM_006892, human DNMT3A: NM_022552, Crystal structure of DNMT3A–DNMT3L in complex with CGT DNA: PDB 5YX2, and GRCm38 Mus musculus genome sequence mm10 (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/assembly/GCF_000001635.20).
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Research Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Data availability
Coordinates and structure factors for the DNMT3B complexes have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank under accession codes 6U8P, 6U8V, 6U8X, and 6U8W. The deep enzymology data have been deposited in the data repository of the University of Stuttgart DARUS (https://darus.uni-stuttgart.de/) under https://doi.org/10.18419/darus-627. The eRRBS data have been deposited in Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) with the accession number GSE145899. The source data underlying Figs. 1a, e, f, 2a, b, 3f, 4a, d, e, i, 7a, b, and Supplementary Figs. 3a, b, 4b, 6a–c, 12a, 13, 15a, b, 16c are provided as a Source data file.
Code availability
The custom scripts used for data analysis are available upon request. Source data are provided with this paper.
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Acknowledgements
We would like to thank staff members at the Advanced Light Source (ALS), Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory for access to X-ray beamlines. This work was supported by NIH grants (1R35GM119721 to J.S.; R01CA215284 and R01CA211336 to G.G.W., and 1R35 ES031707 to Y.W.), the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIH (ES101965 to P.A.W.), and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft DFG (grants JE 252/10 and JE 252/36 to A.J.). We are also grateful for professional assistance of UNC facilities including Genomics Core, which are in part supported by the UNC Cancer Center Core Support Grant P30-CA016086. G.G.W. is an American Cancer Society (ACS) Research Scholar and a Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) Scholar.
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L.G., Z.M.Z. and J.L. performed the structural studies. L.G., W.R. and H.A. performed in vitro enzymatic assays with DNMT3A–DNMT3L and DNMT3B–DNMT3L proteins. J.S. directed the structural and enzymatic study for DNMT3A–DNMT3L and DNMT3B–DNMT3L and analyzed the data. M.E. conducted enzyme purification and enzyme kinetics and deep enzymology methylation reactions with DNMT3B and DNMT3A with support from M.D. and R.J. M.D. performed and analyzed the deep enzymology experiments with K777A. S.A., P.B., and A.J. developed and implemented the deep enzymology workflow with DNMT3A and DNMT3B, conducted the experiments and analyzed the data. D.C. and Y.G. carried out eRRBS and DNMT3A- and DNMT3B-mediated genomic methylation studies under guidance of G.G.W. J.Y. performed LC-MS measurement of global cytosine methylation under the guidance of Y.W. H.U. and S.A.G. analyzed eRRBS methylome data under direction of P.A.W. and G.G.W. G.G.W., A.J. and J.S. prepared the paper with input from all authors.
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Gao, L., Emperle, M., Guo, Y. et al. Comprehensive structure-function characterization of DNMT3B and DNMT3A reveals distinctive de novo DNA methylation mechanisms. Nat Commun 11, 3355 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17109-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17109-4
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Alterations in DNA methylation machinery in a rat model of osteoarthritis of the hip
Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research (2024)
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Structure-guided functional suppression of AML-associated DNMT3A hotspot mutations
Nature Communications (2024)
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Structural basis for the H2AK119ub1-specific DNMT3A-nucleosome interaction
Nature Communications (2024)
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Specific DNMT3C flanking sequence preferences facilitate methylation of young murine retrotransposons
Communications Biology (2024)