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Home NEWS Science News Chemistry

DNA methylation from bacteria & mircobiome using nanopore technology discovered

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
April 5, 2021
in Chemistry
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Credit: Mount Sinai Health System

Journal Name: Nature Methods

Title of the Article: Discovering multiple types of DNA methylation from individual bacteria and microbiome using nanopore sequencing

Corresponding Author: Gang Fang, PhD

Bottom Line:

  • Bacterial DNA methylation occurs at diverse sequence contexts and plays important functional roles in cellular defense and gene regulation. An increasing number of studies have reported that bacterial DNA methylation has important roles affecting clinically relevant phenotypes such as virulence, host colonization, sporulation, biofilm formation, among others.
  • Bacterial methylomes contain three primary forms of DNA methylation: N6-methyladenine (6 mA), N4-methylcytosine (4mC) and 5-methylcytosine (5mC). The widely used bisulfite sequencing for DNA methylation mapping in mammalian genomes are not effective at resolving bacterial methylomes. Single molecule real-time (SMRT) can effectively map 6mA and 4mC events, and have empowered the study of >4,000 bacterial methylomes in the past ten years. However, SMRT sequencing cannot effectively detect 5mC methylation.

    Results: In this work, we developed a new method that enables nanopore sequencing for broadly applicable methylation discovery. We applied it to individual bacteria and the gut microbiome for reliable methylation discovery. In addition, we demonstrated the use of DNA methylation for high resolution microbiome analysis, mapping mobile genetic elements with their host genomes directly from microbiome samples.

    Why the Research Is Interesting:

  • To battle with bacterial pathogens. Antibiotics resistance poses great risk to public health. To best battle with bacterial pathogens, it is important to discover novel drug targets. Increasing evidence suggests that bacterial DNA methylation plays important roles in regulating bacterial physiology such as virulence, sporulation, biofilm formation, pathogen-host interaction etc. The new method in this work allows researchers to more effectively discover novel DNA methylation from bacterial pathogens, opening new opportunities to discovery novel targets to design new inhibitors.
  • To better understand microbiome. Despite growing appreciation for the role of microbiome in human health, comprehensive characterization of microbiomes remains difficult. To effectively harness the therapeutic power of microbiome, it is important to understand the specific bacteria species and particular strains in human microbiome. Our new method combines the power of long read sequencing and bacterial DNA methylation to resolve complex microbiome samples into individual species and strains. So, it will also empower higher resolution characterization of human microbiome for medical applications.
  • The power of methylation based mapping of mobile genetic elements (often encoding antibiotics resistance genes) to their host genomes also helps tracking the transmission of antibiotic resistance genes.

    How: By examining three types of DNA methylation in a large diversity of sequence contexts, we observed that nanopore sequencing signal displays complex heterogeneity across methylation events of the same type. To capture this complexity and enable nanopore sequencing for broadly applicable methylation discovery, we generated a training dataset from an assortment of bacterial species and developed a novel method that couples the identification and fine mapping of the three forms of DNA methylation into a multi-label classification design. We evaluated the method and then applied it to individual bacteria and mouse gut microbiome for reliable methylation discovery. In addition, we demonstrated in the microbiome analysis the use of DNA methylation for binning metagenomic contigs, associating mobile genetic elements with their host genomes, and for the first time, identifying misassembled metagenomic contigs.

    Said Mount Sinai’s Gang Fang of the work:

  • DNA methylation plays important roles in the human genome, and is widely studied in health and various diseases. DNA methylation is also prevalent in bacteria, but our current understanding is still at a relatively early stage.
  • An increasing number of studies have reported that bacterial DNA methylation plays important roles in regulating medically relevant phenotypes of pathogenic bacteria, such as virulence, biofilm formation, virulence, sporulation, among others.
  • Broader and deeper study of bacterial DNA methylation requires reliable technologies, and our new method fills an important gap in that it now enables the use of Nanopore sequencing to make new discoveries from bacterial genomes.
  • This novel method has broad utility for discovering different forms of DNA methylation from bacteria, assisting functional studies of epigenetic regulation in bacteria, and exploiting bacterial epigenomes for more effective metagenomic analyses.

    ###

    To request a copy of the paper or to schedule an interview with Dr. Gang Fang, please contact Mount Sinai’s Director of Media and Public Affairs, Elizabeth Dowling, at [email protected] or at 212 241-9200.

  • Media Contact
    Elizabeth Dowling
    [email protected]

    Related Journal Article

    http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41592-021-01109-3

    Tags: BacteriologyBiologyBiotechnologyCell BiologyGenesGeneticsMedicine/HealthMolecular BiologyNanotechnology/Micromachines
    Share12Tweet8Share2ShareShareShare2

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