Epigenetic Gene Regulation in the Bacterial World
Universidad de Sevilla · University of California, Santa Barbara
Abstract
Like many eukaryotes, bacteria make widespread use of postreplicative DNA methylation for the epigenetic control of DNA-protein interactions. Unlike eukaryotes, however, bacteria use DNA adenine methylation (rather than DNA cytosine methylation) as an epigenetic signal. DNA adenine methylation plays roles in the virulence of diverse pathogens of humans and livestock animals, including pathogenic Escherichia coli, Salmonella, Vibrio, Yersinia, Haemophilus, and Brucella. In Alphaproteobacteria, methylation of adenine at GANTC sites by the CcrM methylase regulates the cell cycle and couples gene transcription to DNA replication. In Gammaproteobacteria, adenine methylation at GATC sites by the Dam methylase…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 6.41
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 304
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Biology
- DNA methylation
- Genetics
- Epigenetics of physical exercise
- Epigenomics
- RNA-Directed DNA Methylation
- Epigenetics
- Circular bacterial chromosome