Complementation of methylation deficiency in embryonic stem cells by a DNA methyltransferase minigene
- *Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, and †Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Department of Biology, Cambridge, MA 02142; ‡Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Department of Medicine, Cardiovascular Division, Boston, MA 02115; and §Franz Volhard Clinic, Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine, Department of Nephrology, Hypertension, and Genetics, Wiltbergstrasse 50, 13125 Berlin, Germany
Abstract
Previous attempts to express functional DNA cytosine methyltransferase (EC 2.1.1.37) in cells transfected with the available Dnmt cDNAs have met with little or no success. We show that the published Dnmt sequence encodes an amino terminal-truncated protein that is tolerated only at very low levels when stably expressed in embryonic stem cells. Normal expression levels were, however, obtained with constructs containing a continuation of an ORF with a coding capacity of up to 171 amino acids upstream of the previously defined start site. The protein encoded by these constructs comigrated in SDS/PAGE with the endogenous enzyme and restored methylation activity in transfected cells. This was shown by functional rescue of Dnmt mutant embryonic stem cells that contain highly demethylated genomic DNA and fail to differentiate normally. When transfected with the minigene construct, the genomic DNA became remethylated and the cells regained the capacity to form teratomas that displayed a wide variety of differentiated cell types. Our results define an amino-terminal domain of the mammalian MTase that is crucial for stable expression and function in vivo.
Footnotes
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↵ ¶ To whom reprint requests should be addressed.
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Robert A. Weinberg, Whitehead Institute, Cambridge, MA
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Abbreviations: ES cells, embryonic stem cells; MTase, DNA (cytosine-5-)-methyltransferase; MoMuLV, Moloney murine leukemia virus.
Data deposition: The sequence reported in this paper has been deposited in the GenBank data base (accession no. U70051U70051).
- Copyright © 1996, The National Academy of Sciences of the USA








