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Dive into the research topics where Timothy H. Bestor is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy H. Bestor.


Cell | 1992

Targeted mutation of the DNA methyltransferase gene results in embryonic lethality

En Li; Timothy H. Bestor; Rudolf Jaenisch

Gene targeting in embryonic stem (ES) cells has been used to mutate the murine DNA methyltransferase gene. ES cell lines homozygous for the mutation were generated by consecutive targeting of both wild-type alleles; the mutant cells were viable and showed no obvious abnormalities with respect to growth rate or morphology, and had only trace levels of DNA methyltransferase activity. A quantitative end-labeling assay showed that the level of m5C in the DNA of homozygous mutant cells was about one-third that of wild-type cells, and Southern blot analysis after cleavage of the DNA with a methylation-sensitive restriction endonuclease revealed substantial demethylation of endogenous retroviral DNA. The mutation was introduced into the germline of mice and found to cause a recessive lethal phenotype. Homozygous embryos were stunted, delayed in development, and did not survive past mid-gestation. The DNA of homozygous embryos showed a reduction of the level of m5C similar to that of homozygous ES cells. These results indicate that while a 3-fold reduction in levels of genomic m5C has no detectable effect on the viability or proliferation of ES cells in culture, a similar reduction of DNA methylation in embryos causes abnormal development and embryonic lethality.


Trends in Genetics | 1997

Cytosine methylation and the ecology of intragenomic parasites

Jeffrey A. Yoder; Colum Walsh; Timothy H. Bestor

Most of the 5-methylcytosine in mammalian DNA resides in transposons, which are specialized intragenomic parasites that represent at least 35% of the genome. Transposon promoters are inactive when methylated and, over time, C-->T transition mutations at methylated sites destroy many transposons. Apart from that subset of genes subject to X inactivation and genomic imprinting, no cellular gene in a non-expressing tissue has been proven to be methylated in a pattern that prevents transcription. It has become increasingly difficult to hold that reversible promoter methylation is commonly involved in developmental gene control; instead, suppression of parasitic sequence elements appears to be the primary function of cytosine methylation, with crucial secondary roles in allele-specific gene expression as seen in X inactivation and genomic imprinting.


Nature | 2007

DNMT3L connects unmethylated lysine 4 of histone H3 to de novo methylation of DNA.

Steen K.T. Ooi; Chen Qiu; Emily Bernstein; Keqin Li; Da Jia; Zhe Yang; Hediye Erdjument-Bromage; Paul Tempst; Shau Ping Lin; C. David Allis; Xiaodong Cheng; Timothy H. Bestor

Mammals use DNA methylation for the heritable silencing of retrotransposons and imprinted genes and for the inactivation of the X chromosome in females. The establishment of patterns of DNA methylation during gametogenesis depends in part on DNMT3L, an enzymatically inactive regulatory factor that is related in sequence to the DNA methyltransferases DNMT3A and DNMT3B. The main proteins that interact in vivo with the product of an epitope-tagged allele of the endogenous Dnmt3L gene were identified by mass spectrometry as DNMT3A2, DNMT3B and the four core histones. Peptide interaction assays showed that DNMT3L specifically interacts with the extreme amino terminus of histone H3; this interaction was strongly inhibited by methylation at lysine 4 of histone H3 but was insensitive to modifications at other positions. Crystallographic studies of human DNMT3L showed that the protein has a carboxy-terminal methyltransferase-like domain and an N-terminal cysteine-rich domain. Cocrystallization of DNMT3L with the tail of histone H3 revealed that the tail bound to the cysteine-rich domain of DNMT3L, and substitution of key residues in the binding site eliminated the H3 tail–DNMT3L interaction. These data indicate that DNMT3L recognizes histone H3 tails that are unmethylated at lysine 4 and induces de novo DNA methylation by recruitment or activation of DNMT3A2.


Cell | 1992

A targeting sequence directs DNA methyltransferase to sites of DNA replication in mammalian nuclei

Heinrich Leonhardt; Andrea W. Page; Heinz-Ulrich G. Weier; Timothy H. Bestor

Tissue-specific patterns of methylated deoxycytidine residues in the mammalian genome are preserved by postreplicative methylation of newly synthesized DNA. DNA methyltransferase (MTase) is here shown to associate with replication foci during S phase but to display a diffuse nucleoplasmic distribution in non-S phase cells. Analysis of DNA MTase-beta-galactosidase fusion proteins has shown that association with replication foci is mediated by a novel targeting sequence located near the N-terminus of DNA MTase. This sequence has the properties expected of a targeting sequence in that it is not required for enzymatic activity, prevents proper targeting when deleted, and, when fused to beta-galactosidase, causes the fusion protein to associate with replication foci in a cell cycle-dependent manner.


Nature | 2004

Meiotic catastrophe and retrotransposon reactivation in male germ cells lacking Dnmt3L

Déborah Bourc'his; Timothy H. Bestor

Mammalian genomes employ heritable cytosine methylation in the long-term silencing of retrotransposons and genes subject to genomic imprinting and X chromosome inactivation. Little is known of the mechanisms that direct cytosine methylation to specific sequences. Here we show that DNA methyltransferase 3-like (Dnmt3L (ref. 1)) is expressed in testes during a brief perinatal period in the non-dividing precursors of spermatogonial stem cells at a stage where retrotransposons undergo de novo methylation. Deletion of the Dnmt3L gene prevented the de novo methylation of both long-terminal-repeat (LTR) and non-LTR retrotransposons, which were transcribed at high levels in spermatogonia and spermatocytes. Loss of Dnmt3L from early germ cells also caused meiotic failure in spermatocytes, which do not express Dnmt3L. Whereas dispersed repeated sequences were demethylated in mutant germ cells, tandem repeats in pericentric regions were methylated normally. This result indicates that the Dnmt3L protein might have a function in the de novo methylation of dispersed repeated sequences in a premeiotic genome scanning process that occurs in male germ cells at about the time of birth.


Nature Genetics | 1998

Transcription of IAP endogenous retroviruses is constrained by cytosine methylation.

Walsh Cp; Chaillet; Timothy H. Bestor

116 nature genetics volume 20 october 1998 Berkeley, California 94720, USA. 2Department of Pathology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA. 3Department of Radiation Biology, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, USA. Correspondence should be addressed to J.C. (e-mail: [email protected]). 1. Martin, G.M. Birth Defects 14, 5−39 (1978). 2. Goto, M. Mech. Ageing Dev. 98, 239–254 (1997). 3. Martin, G.M., Sprague, C.A. & Epstein, C.J. Lab. Invest. 23, 86–92 (1970). 4. Salk, D., Bryant, E., Hoehn, H., Johnston, P. & Martin, G.M. Adv. Exp. Bio. Med. 190, 305–311 (1985). 5. Fukuchi, K., Martin, G.M. & Monnat, R.J. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 86, 5893–5897 (1989). 6. Cheng, R.Z., Murano, S., Kurz, B. & Shmookler-Reis, R.J. Mutat. Res. 237, 259–269 (1990). 7. Yu, C.E. et al. Science 272, 258–262 (1996). 8. German, J. Medicine 72, 393–406 (1993). 9. Main, I.S. Nucleic Acids Res. 25, 3187–3195 (1997). 10. Mushegian, A.R., Bassett, D.E. Jr, Boguski, M.S., Bork, P., & Koonin, E.V. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 94, 5831–5836 (1997). 11. Gray, M.D. et al. Nature Genet. 17, 100–103 (1997). 12. Linn, S.M., Lloyd, R.S. & Roberts, R.T. Nucleases (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, New York, 1993). 13. Yamagata, K. et al. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 95, 8733–8738 (1998). 14. Ogburn, C.E. et al. Hum. Genet. 101, 121–125 (1997). 15. Yan, H., Chen, C.-Y., Kobayashi, R. & Newport, J. Nature Genet. 19, 375–378 (1998).


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1988

Cloning and sequencing of a cDNA encoding DNA methyltransferase of mouse cells: The carboxyl-terminal domain of the mammalian enzymes is related to bacterial restriction methyltransferases☆

Timothy H. Bestor; Andrew P. Laudano; Robert J. Mattaliano; Vernon M. Ingram

A cDNA encoding DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferase (DNA MeTase) of mouse cells has been cloned and sequenced. The nucleotide sequence contains an open reading frame sufficient to encode a polypeptide of 1573 amino acid residues, which is close to the apparent size of the largest species of DNA MeTase found in mouse cells. The carboxylterminal 570 amino acid residues of the inferred protein sequence shows striking similarities to bacterial type II DNA cytosine methyltransferases and appears to represent a catalytic methyltransferase domain. The amino-terminal portion of the molecule may be involved in regulating the activity of the carboxyl-terminal methyltransferase domain, since antibodies directed against a peptide sequence located within this region inhibits transmethylase activity in vitro. A 5200 base DNA MeTase-specific mRNA was found to be expressed in all mouse cell types tested, and cell lines known to have different genomic methylation patterns were found to contain DNA MeTase proteins of similar or identical sizes and de novo sequence specificities. The implications of these findings for an understanding of the mechanisms involved in the establishment and maintenance of methylation patterns are discussed.


Molecular Cell | 2008

A piRNA Pathway Primed by Individual Transposons Is Linked to De Novo DNA Methylation in Mice

Alexei A. Aravin; Ravi Sachidanandam; Déborah Bourc'his; Christopher Schaefer; Dubravka Pezic; Katalin Fejes Tóth; Timothy H. Bestor; Gregory J. Hannon

piRNAs and Piwi proteins have been implicated in transposon control and are linked to transposon methylation in mammals. Here we examined the construction of the piRNA system in the restricted developmental window in which methylation patterns are set during mammalian embryogenesis. We find robust expression of two Piwi family proteins, MIWI2 and MILI. Their associated piRNA profiles reveal differences from Drosophila wherein large piRNA clusters act as master regulators of silencing. Instead, in mammals, dispersed transposon copies initiate the pathway, producing primary piRNAs, which predominantly join MILI in the cytoplasm. MIWI2, whose nuclear localization and association with piRNAs depend upon MILI, is enriched for secondary piRNAs antisense to the elements that it controls. The Piwi pathway lies upstream of known mediators of DNA methylation, since piRNAs are still produced in dnmt3L mutants, which fail to methylate transposons. This implicates piRNAs as specificity determinants of DNA methylation in germ cells.


Cell | 2001

Genomic Imprinting Disrupted by a Maternal Effect Mutation in the Dnmt1 Gene

Carina Y. Howell; Timothy H. Bestor; Feng Ding; Keith E. Latham; Carmen Mertineit; Jacquetta M. Trasler; J. Richard Chaillet

Maintenance of genomic methylation patterns in mammalian somatic cells depends on DNA methyltransferase-1 (Dnmt1). Mouse oocytes and preimplantation embryos lack Dnmt1 but express a variant of this protein called Dnmt1o. We eliminated Dnmt1o by deletion of the oocyte-specific promoter and first exon from the Dnmt1 locus. Homozygous animals were normal, but most heterozygous fetuses of homozygous females died during the last third of gestation. Although genomic methylation patterns were established normally in Dnmt1o-deficient oocytes, embryos derived from such oocytes showed a loss of allele-specific expression and methylation at certain imprinted loci. Transient nuclear localization of Dnmt1o in 8-cell embryos suggests that this variant of Dnmt1 provides maintenance methyltransferase activity specifically at imprinted loci during the fourth embryonic S phase.


Cell | 2008

The Colorful History of Active DNA Demethylation

Steen K.T. Ooi; Timothy H. Bestor

Patterns of DNA cytosine methylation are subject to mitotic inheritance in both plants and vertebrates. Plants use 5-methylcytosine glycosylases and the base excision repair pathway to remove excess cytosine methylation. In mammals, active demethylation has been proposed to operate via several very different mechanisms. Two recent reports in Nature now claim that the demethylation process is initiated by the same enzymes that establish the methylation mark, the DNA methyltransferases DNMT3A and DNMT3B (Kangaspeska et al., 2008; Métivier et al., 2008).

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Jeffrey A. Yoder

North Carolina State University

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John R. Edwards

Washington University in St. Louis

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Jacquetta M. Trasler

Montreal Children's Hospital

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Mary G. Goll

Carnegie Institution for Science

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