BACKGROUND In mammalian genomes, modifications to cytosine bases, particularly in cytosine-guanine (CpG) dinucleotide contexts, play a major role in shaping the epigenome. The canonical epigenetic mark is 5-methylcytosine (5mC), but… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND In mammalian genomes, modifications to cytosine bases, particularly in cytosine-guanine (CpG) dinucleotide contexts, play a major role in shaping the epigenome. The canonical epigenetic mark is 5-methylcytosine (5mC), but oxidized versions of 5mC including 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) are now known to be important players in epigenomic dynamics. Understanding the functional role of these modifications in gene regulation, normal development, or pathological conditions requires the ability to localize these modifications in genomic DNA. The classical approach for sequencing cytosine modifications has involved differential deamination via the chemical sodium bisulfite; however, bisulfite is destructive, limiting its utility in important biological or clinical settings where detection of low frequency populations is critical. Additionally, bisulfite fails to resolve 5mC from 5hmC. SCOPE OF REVIEW To summarize how enzymatic, rather than chemical, approaches can be leveraged to localize and resolve different cytosine modifications in a non-destructive manner. MAJOR CONCLUSIONS Nature offers a suite of enzymes with biological roles in cytosine modification spanning from bacteriophages to mammals. These enzymatic activities include methylation by DNA methyltransferases, oxidation of 5mC by TET family enzymes, hypermodification of 5hmC by glucosyltransferases, and the generation of transition mutations from cytosine to uracil by DNA deaminases. Here, we describe how insights into the natural reactivities of these DNA modifying enzymes can be leveraged to convert them into powerful biotechnological tools. Application of these enzymes in sequencing can be accessed by relying on their natural activities, exploiting their ability to discriminate between cytosine modification states, reacting these enzymes with functionalized substrate analogs to introduce chemical handles, or engineering the DNA modifying enzymes to take on new reactivities. We describe how these enzymatic reactions have been combined and permuted to localize DNA modifications with high specificity and without the destructive limitations posed by chemical methods for epigenetic sequencing.
               
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