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Publication : An Adversarial DNA N<sup>6</sup>-Methyladenine-Sensor Network Preserves Polycomb Silencing.

First Author  Kweon SM Year  2019
Journal  Mol Cell Volume  74
Issue  6 Pages  1138-1147.e6
PubMed ID  30982744 Mgi Jnum  J:278437
Mgi Id  MGI:6323482 Doi  10.1016/j.molcel.2019.03.018
Citation  Kweon SM, et al. (2019) An Adversarial DNA N(6)-Methyladenine-Sensor Network Preserves Polycomb Silencing. Mol Cell 74(6):1138-1147.e6
abstractText  Adenine N6 methylation in DNA (6mA) is widespread among bacteria and phage and is detected in mammalian genomes, where its function is largely unexplored. Here we show that 6mA deposition and removal are catalyzed by the Mettl4 methyltransferase and Alkbh4 dioxygenase, respectively, and that 6mA accumulation in genic elements corresponds with transcriptional silencing. Inactivation of murine Mettl4 depletes 6mA and causes sublethality and craniofacial dysmorphism in incross progeny. We identify distinct 6mA sensor domains of prokaryotic origin within the MPND deubiquitinase and ASXL1, a component of the Polycomb repressive deubiquitinase (PR-DUB) complex, both of which act to remove monoubiquitin from histone H2A (H2A-K119Ub), a repressive mark. Deposition of 6mA by Mettl4 triggers the proteolytic destruction of both sensor proteins, preserving genome-wide H2A-K119Ub levels. Expression of the bacterial 6mA methyltransferase Dam, in contrast, fails to destroy either sensor. These findings uncover a native, adversarial 6mA network architecture that preserves Polycomb silencing.
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