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Dive into the research topics where Giedrius Vilkaitis is active.

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Featured researches published by Giedrius Vilkaitis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Novel Subtype of Type IIs Restriction Enzymes BfiI ENDONUCLEASE EXHIBITS SIMILARITIES TO THE EDTA-RESISTANT NUCLEASE Nuc OF SALMONELLA TYPHIMURIUM

Rimantas Sapranauskas; Giedrius Sasnauskas; Arunas Lagunavicius; Giedrius Vilkaitis; Arvydas Lubys; Virginijus Siksnys

The type IIs restriction enzyme BfiI recognizes the non-palindromic nucleotide sequence 5′-ACTGGG-3′ and cleaves complementary DNA strands 5/4 nucleotides downstream of the recognition sequence. The genes coding for the BfiI restriction-modification (R-M) system were cloned/sequenced and biochemical characterization of BfiI restriction enzyme was performed. The BfiI R-M system contained three proteins: two N4-methylcytosine methyltransferases and a restriction enzyme. Sequencing of bisulfite-treated methylated DNA indicated that each methyltransferase modifies cytosines on opposite strands of the recognition sequence. The N-terminal part of the BfiI restriction enzyme amino acid sequence revealed intriguing similarities to an EDTA-resistant nuclease of Salmonella typhimurium. Biochemical analyses demonstrated that BfiI, like the nuclease of S. typhimurium, cleaves DNA in the absence of Mg2+ ions and hydrolyzes an artificial substrate bis(p-nitrophenyl) phosphate. However, unlike the nonspecific S. typhimurium nuclease, BfiI restriction enzyme cleaves DNA specifically. We propose that the DNA-binding specificity of BfiI stems from the C-terminal part of the protein. The catalytic N-terminal subdomain ofBfiI radically differs from that of type II restriction enzymes and is presumably similar to the EDTA-resistant nonspecific nuclease of S. typhimurium; therefore, BfiI did not require metal ions for catalysis. We suggest that BfiI represents a novel subclass of type IIs restriction enzymes that differs from the archetypal FokI endonuclease by the fold of its cleavage domain, the domain location, and reaction mechanism.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Functional mapping of the plant small RNA methyltransferase: HEN1 physically interacts with HYL1 and DICER-LIKE 1 proteins

Simona Baranauskė; Milda Mickutė; Alexandra Plotnikova; Andreas Finke; Česlovas Venclovas; Saulius Klimašauskas; Giedrius Vilkaitis

Methylation of 3′-terminal nucleotides of miRNA/miRNA* is part of miRNAs biogenesis in plants but is not found in animals. In Arabidopsis thaliana this reaction is carried out by a multidomain AdoMet-dependent 2′-O-methyltransferase HEN1. Using deletion and structure-guided mutational analysis, we show that the double-stranded RNA-binding domains R1 and R2 of HEN1 make significant but uneven contributions to substrate RNA binding, and map residues in each domain responsible for this function. Using GST pull-down assays and yeast two-hybrid analysis we demonstrate direct HEN1 interactions, mediated by its FK506-binding protein-like domain and R2 domain, with the microRNA biogenesis protein HYL1. Furthermore, we find that HEN1 forms a complex with DICER-LIKE 1 (DCL1) ribonuclease, another key protein involved in miRNA biogenesis machinery. In contrast, no direct interaction is detectable between HEN1 and SERRATE. On the basis of these findings, we propose a mechanism of plant miRNA maturation which involves binding of the HEN1 methyltransferase to the DCL1•HYL1•miRNA complex excluding the SERRATE protein.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

A directed evolution design of a GCG-specific DNA hemimethylase

Rūta Gerasimaitė; Giedrius Vilkaitis; Saulius Klimašauskas

DNA cytosine-5 methyltransferases (C5-MTases) are valuable models to study sequence-specific modification of DNA and are becoming increasingly important tools for biotechnology. Here we describe a structure-guided rational protein design combined with random mutagenesis and selection to change the specificity of the HhaI C5-MTase from GCGC to GCG. The specificity change was brought about by a five-residue deletion and introduction of two arginine residues within and nearby one of the target recognizing loops. DNA protection assays, bisulfite sequencing and enzyme kinetics showed that the best selected variant is comparable to wild-type M.HhaI in terms of sequence fidelity and methylation efficiency, and supersedes the parent enzyme in transalkylation of DNA using synthetic cofactor analogs. The designed C5-MTase can be used to produce hemimethylated CpG sites in DNA, which are valuable substrates for studies of mammalian maintenance MTases.


Clinical Epigenetics | 2016

Splicing-dependent expression of microRNAs of mirtron origin in human digestive and excretory system cancer cells

Stasė Butkytė; Laurynas Čiupas; Eglė Jakubauskienė; Laurynas Vilys; Paulius Mocevicius; Arvydas Kanopka; Giedrius Vilkaitis

BackgroundAn abundant class of intronic microRNAs (miRNAs) undergoes atypical Drosha-independent biogenesis in which the spliceosome governs the excision of hairpin miRNA precursors, called mirtrons. Although nearly 500 splicing-dependent miRNA candidates have been recently predicted via bioinformatic analysis of human RNA-Seq datasets, only a few of them have been experimentally validated. The detailed mechanism of miRNA processing by the splicing machinery and the roles of mirtronic miRNAs in cancer are yet to be uncovered.MethodsWe experimentally examined whether biogenesis of certain miRNAs is under a splicing control by analyzing their expression levels in response to alterations in the 5′- and 3′-splice sites of a series of intron-containing minigenes carrying appropriate miRNAs. The expression levels of the miRNAs processed from mirtrons were determined by quantitative real-time PCR in five digestive tract (pancreas PANC-1, SU.86.86, T3M4, stomach KATOIII, colon HCT116) and two excretory system (kidney CaKi-1, 786-O) carcinoma cell lines as well as in pancreatic, stomach, and colorectal tumors. Transiently expressed SRSF1 and SRSF2 splicing factors were quantified by western blotting in the nuclear fractions of HCT116 cells.ResultsWe found that biogenesis of the human hsa-miR-1227-3p, hsa-miR-1229-3p, and hsa-miR-1236-3p is splicing-dependent; therefore, these miRNAs can be assigned to the class of miRNAs processed by a non-canonical mirtron pathway. The expression analysis revealed a differential regulation of human mirtronic miRNAs in various cancer cell lines and tumors. In particular, hsa-miR-1229-3p is selectively upregulated in the pancreatic and stomach cancer cell lines derived from metastatic sites. Compared with the healthy controls, the expression of hsa-miR-1226-3p was significantly higher in stomach tumors but extensively downregulated in colorectal tumors. Furthermore, we provided evidence that overexpression of SRSF1 or SRSF2 can upregulate the processing of individual mirtronic miRNAs in HCT116 cells.ConclusionsAn interplay of different splicing factors, such as SRSF1 or SRSF2, may alter the levels of miRNAs of mirtron origin in a cell. Our findings underline the specific expression profiles of mirtronic miRNAs in colorectal, stomach, and pancreatic cancer.


Cancer Biomarkers | 2015

Gastrointestinal tract tumors and cell lines possess differential splicing factor expression and tumor associated mRNA isoform formation profiles

Eglė Jakubauskienė; Inga Peciuliene; Laurynas Vilys; Paulius Mocevicius; Giedrius Vilkaitis; Arvydas Kanopka

BACKGROUND Cell lines derived from human tumors have been extensively used as experimental models of neoplastic disease. Although such cell lines differ from both normal and cancerous tissue. OBJECTIVE The data obtained used DNA and RNA microarray systems does not give full information about protein expression levels in cells and tissues. We present experimental evidence that splicing factor SRSF1, SRSF2, U2AF35, U2AF65 and KHSRP expression levels in gastrointestinal tract (colon, gastric and pancreatic) tumors differ compare to healthy tissues and in cell lines, derived from corresponding organs. METHODS Protein expression was analyzed using Western blots. RT-PCR method was used for Fas and Rac splicing analysis. RESULTS Obtained results provided a novel molecular characterization of this important group of human cell lines and their relationships to tumors in vivo. Expression levels of individual splicing factors in tumors might serve as tumor markers. Not all experimental results obtained from cell lines reflect changes that occur in tumors. Also Fas and Rac, cancer associated genes, tumor associated sFas and Rac1b mRNA isoform profiles in cell lines do not correspond to profiles that are observed in tumors. CONCLUSIONS Not all experimental results obtained in cell lines reflect changes that occur in real tumors.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2019

Repurposing enzymatic transferase reactions for targeted labeling and analysis of DNA and RNA

Miglė Tomkuvienė; Milda Mickutė; Giedrius Vilkaitis; Saulius Klimašauskas

Produced as linear biopolymers from four major types of building blocks, DNA and RNA are further furnished with a range of covalent modifications. Despite the impressive specificity of natural enzymes, the transferred groups are often poor reporters and not amenable to further derivatization. Therefore, strategies based on repurposing some of these enzymatic reactions to accept derivatized versions of the transferrable groups have been exploited. By far the most widely used are S-adenosylmethionine-dependent methyltransferases, which along with several other nucleic acids modifying enzymes offer a broad selection of tagging chemistries and molecular features on DNA and RNA that can be targeted in vitro and in vivo. Engineered enzymatic reactions have been implemented in validated DNA sequencing-based protocols for epigenome analysis. The utility of chemo-enzymatic labeling is further enhanced with recent advances in physical detection of individual reporter groups on DNA using super resolution microscopy and nanopore sensing enabling single-molecule multiplex analysis of genetic and epigenetic marks in minute samples. Altogether, a number of new powerful techniques are currently in use or on the verge of real benchtop applications as research tools or next generation diagnostics.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2018

Animal Hen1 2′-O-methyltransferases as tools for 3′-terminal functionalization and labelling of single-stranded RNAs

Milda Mickutė; Milda Nainytė; Lina Vasiliauskaitė; Alexandra Plotnikova; Viktoras Masevičius; Saulius Klimašauskas; Giedrius Vilkaitis

Abstract S-adenosyl-L-methionine-dependent 2′-O-methylati-on of the 3′-terminal nucleotide plays important roles in biogenesis of eukaryotic small non-coding RNAs, such as siRNAs, miRNAs and Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs). Here we demonstrate that, in contrast to Mg2+/Mn2+-dependent plant and bacterial homologues, the Drosophila DmHen1 and human HsHEN1 piRNA methyltransferases require cobalt cations for their enzymatic activity in vitro. We also show for the first time the capacity of the animal Hen1 to catalyse the transfer of a variety of extended chemical groups from synthetic analogues of the AdoMet cofactor onto a wide range (22–80 nt) of single-stranded RNAs permitting their 3′-terminal functionalization and labelling. Moreover, we provide evidence that deletion of a small C-terminal region of the DmHen1 protein further increases its modification efficiency and abolishes a modest 3′-terminal nucleotide bias observed for the full-length protein. Finally, we show that fluorophore-tagged ssRNA molecules are successfully detected in fluorescence resonance energy transfer assays both individually and in a total RNA mixture. The presented DmHen1-assisted RNA labelling provides a solid basis for developing novel chemo-enzymatic approaches for in vitro studies and in vivo monitoring of single-stranded RNA pools.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Processive Methylation of Hemimethylated CpG Sites by Mouse Dnmt1 DNA Methyltransferase

Giedrius Vilkaitis; Isao Suetake; Saulius Klimašauskas; Shoji Tajima


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

The Mechanism of DNA Cytosine-5 Methylation KINETIC AND MUTATIONAL DISSECTION OF HhaI METHYLTRANSFERASE

Giedrius Vilkaitis; Egle˙ Merkiene˙; Saulius Serva; Elmar G. Weinhold; Saulius Klimasauskas


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Functional roles of the conserved threonine 250 in the target recognition domain of HhaI DNA methyltransferase

Giedrius Vilkaitis; Aiping Dong; Elmar G. Weinhold; Xiaodong Cheng; Saulius Klimašauskas

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