Rapid identification of methylase specificity (RIMS-seq) jointly identifies methylated motifs and generates shotgun sequencing of bacterial genomes.
Nucleic Acids Res
; 49(19): e113, 2021 11 08.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-34417598
DNA methylation is widespread amongst eukaryotes and prokaryotes to modulate gene expression and confer viral resistance. 5-Methylcytosine (m5C) methylation has been described in genomes of a large fraction of bacterial species as part of restriction-modification systems, each composed of a methyltransferase and cognate restriction enzyme. Methylases are site-specific and target sequences vary across organisms. High-throughput methods, such as bisulfite-sequencing can identify m5C at base resolution but require specialized library preparations and single molecule, real-time (SMRT) sequencing usually misses m5C. Here, we present a new method called RIMS-seq (rapid identification of methylase specificity) to simultaneously sequence bacterial genomes and determine m5C methylase specificities using a simple experimental protocol that closely resembles the DNA-seq protocol for Illumina. Importantly, the resulting sequencing quality is identical to DNA-seq, enabling RIMS-seq to substitute standard sequencing of bacterial genomes. Applied to bacteria and synthetic mixed communities, RIMS-seq reveals new methylase specificities, supporting routine study of m5C methylation while sequencing new genomes.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
DNA Modification Methylases
/
DNA Restriction Enzymes
/
Genome, Bacterial
/
5-Methylcytosine
/
Escherichia coli K12
/
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Type of study:
Diagnostic_studies
Limits:
Humans
Language:
En
Journal:
Nucleic Acids Res
Year:
2021
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
United States
Country of publication:
United kingdom