Recognition of hemi-methylated DNA by the SRA protein UHRF1 by a base-flipping mechanism
09/10/2008
DNA methylation of CpG dinucleotides is an important
epigenetic modification of mammalian genomes and is
essential for the regulation of chromatin structure,
of gene expression and of genome stability1, 2.
Differences in DNA methylation patterns underlie a
wide range of biological processes, such as genomic
imprinting, inactivation of the X chromosome,
embryogenesis, and carcinogenesis3, 4, 5, 6.
Inheritance of the epigenetic methylation pattern is
mediated by the enzyme DNA methyltransferase 1
(Dnmt1), which methylates newly synthesized CpG
sequences during DNA replication, depending on the
methylation status of the template strands7, 8. The
protein UHRF1 (also known as Np95 and ICBP90)
recognizes hemi-methylation sites via a SET and
RING-associated (SRA) domain and directs Dnmt1 to
these sites9, 10, 11. Here we report the crystal
structures of the SRA domain in free and
hemi-methylated DNA-bound states. The SRA domain
folds into a globular structure with a basic concave
surface formed by highly conserved residues. Binding
of DNA to the concave surface causes a loop and an
amino-terminal tail of the SRA domain to fold into
DNA interfaces at the major and minor grooves of the
methylation site. In contrast to fully methylated CpG
sites recognized by the methyl-CpG-binding domain12,
13, the methylcytosine base at the hemi-methylated
site is flipped out of the DNA helix in the SRA–DNA
complex and fits tightly into a protein pocket on the
concave surface. The complex structure suggests that
the successive flip out of the pre-existing
methylated cytosine and the target cytosine to be
methylated is associated with the coordinated
transfer of the hemi-methylated CpG site from UHRF1
to Dnmt1.
Nature 455, 818-821 (9 October 2008) | doi:10.1038/nature07249
Nature 455, 818-821 (9 October 2008) | doi:10.1038/nature07249
|
Structural basis for recognition of hemi-methylated DNA by the SRA domain of human UHRF1
09/10/2008
Epigenetic inheritance in mammals is characterized by
high-fidelity replication of CpG methylation patterns
during development1, 2. UHRF1 (also known as ICBP90
in humans and Np95 in mouse)3 is an E3 ligase
important for the maintenance of global and local DNA
methylation in vivo 4, 5. The preferential affinity
of UHRF1 for hemi-methylated DNA over symmetrically
methylated DNA by means of its SET and
RING-associated (SRA) domain6 and its association
with the maintenance DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1)
suggests a role in replication of the epigenetic
code4, 5, 7. Here we report the 1.7 Å crystal
structure of the apo SRA domain of human UHRF1 and a
2.2 Å structure of its complex with hemi-methylated
DNA, revealing a previously unknown reading mechanism
for methylated CpG sites (mCpG). The SRA–DNA complex
has several notable structural features including a
binding pocket that accommodates the 5-methylcytosine
that is flipped out of the duplex DNA. Two
specialized loops reach through the resulting gap in
the DNA from both the major and the minor grooves to
read the other three bases of the CpG duplex. The
major groove loop confers both specificity for the
CpG dinucleotide and discrimination against
methylation of deoxycytidine of the complementary
strand. The structure, along with mutagenesis data,
suggests how UHRF1 acts as a key factor for DNMT1
maintenance methylation through recognition of a
fundamental unit of epigenetic inheritance, mCpG.
Nature 455, 822-825 (9 October 2008) | doi:10.1038/nature07273
Nature 455, 822-825 (9 October 2008) | doi:10.1038/nature07273

