User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
- To add, or treat with methyl alcohol (see methylated spirits)
- To add a methyl group to a compound
- To add a methyl group to a nucleic acid as part of the process of gene expression
Related terms
Extensive Definition
Methylation is a term used in the chemical
sciences to denote the attachment or substitution of a methyl group on various substrates.
This term is commonly used in chemistry, biochemistry, soil science
and the biological sciences.
In biochemistry, methylation more specifically
refers to the replacement of a hydrogen
atom with the methyl group.
In biological systems, methylation is catalyzed by
enzymes; such methylation
can be involved in modification of heavy
metals, regulation of gene
expression, regulation of protein
function, and RNA
metabolism. Methylation of heavy metals
can also occur outside of biological
systems. Chemical methylation of tissue samples is also one
method for reducing certain
histological staining artifacts.
Biological methylation
Epigenetics
Methylation contributing to epigenetic inheritance can occur either through DNA methylation or protein methylation.DNA
methylation in vertebrates typically occurs at CpG sites
(cytosine-phosphate-guanine sites; that is, where a cytosine is directly followed
by a guanine in the DNA
sequence); this methylation results in the conversion of the
cytosine to 5-methylcytosine.
The formation of Me-CpG is catalyzed by the
enzyme DNA
methyltransferase. CpG sites are uncommon in vertebrate
genomes but are often
found at higher density near vertebrate gene promoters where they are
collectively referred to as CpG islands.
The methylation state of these CpG sites can have a major impact on
gene
activity/expression.
Protein methylation typically takes place on
arginine or lysine amino acid
residues in the protein sequence. Arginine can be methylated once
(monomethylated arginine) or twice, with either both methyl groups
on one terminal nitrogen (asymmetric dimethylated arginine) or one
on both nitrogens (symmetric dimethylated arginine) by
peptidylarginine methyltransferases (PRMTs). Lysine can be
methylated once, twice or three times by lysine
methyltransferases. Protein methylation has been most well
studied in the histones.
The transfer of methyl
groups from S-adenosyl
methionine to histones is catalyzed by enzymes known as
histone methyltransferases. Histones which are methylated on
certain residues can act epigenetically
to repress or activate gene expression. Protein methylation is one
type of
post-translational modification.
Embryonic development
In early development (fertilization to eight-cell stage), the eukaryotic genome is demethylated. From the eight-cell stage to the morula, de novo methylation of the genome occurs, modifying and adding epigenetic information to the genome. By blastula stage, the methylation is complete. This process is referred to as "epigenetic reprogramming". The importance of methylation was shown in knockout mutants without DNA methyltransferase which all died at the morula stage.Postnatal development
Increasing evidence is revealing a role of methylation in the interaction of environmental factors with genetic expression. Differences in maternal care during the first 6 days of life in the rat induce differential methylation patterns in some promoter regions and thus influencing gene expression. Furthermore, even-more-dynamic processes such as interleukin signaling have been shown to be regulated by methylation.Cancer
The pattern of methylation has recently become an important topic for research. Studies have found that in normal tissue, methylation of a gene is mainly localised to the coding region, which is CpG poor. In contrast, the promoter region of the gene is unmethylated, despite a high density of CpG islands in the region.Neoplasia is
characterized by "methylation imbalance" where genome-wide hypomethylation
is accompanied by localized hypermethylation
and an increase in expression
of DNA
methyltransferase. The overall methylation state in a cell
might also be a precipitating factor in carcinogenesis as evidence
suggests that genome-wide hypomethylation can lead to chromosome
instability and increased mutation rates. The methylation state of
some genes can be used as a biomarker
for tumorigenesis.
For instance, hypermethylation of the pi-class glutathione
S-transferase gene (GSTP1) appears to be a promising diagnostic
indicator of prostate
cancer.
In cancer, the dynamics of genetic and epigenetic
gene silencing are very different. Somatic genetic mutation leads
to a block in the production of functional protein from the mutant
allele. If a selective advantage is conferred to the cell, the
cells expand clonally to give rise to a tumor in which all cells
lack the capacity to produce protein. In contrast, epigenetically
mediated gene silencing occurs gradually. It begins with a subtle
decrease in transcription, fostering a decrease in protection of
the CpG island from the spread of flanking heterochromatin and
methylation into the island. This loss results in gradual increases
of individual CpG sites, which vary between copies of the same gene
in different cells.
Bacterial host defense
Additionally, adenosine or cytosine methylation is part of the restriction modification system of many bacteria. Bacterial DNAs are methylated periodically throughout the genome. A methylase is the enzyme that recognizes a specific sequence and methylates one of the bases in or near that sequence. Foreign DNAs (which are not methylated in this manner) that are introduced into the cell are degraded by sequence-specific restriction enzymes. Bacterial genomic DNA is not recognized by these restriction enzymes. The methylation of native DNA acts as a sort of primitive immune system, allowing the bacteria to protect themselves from infection by bacteriophage. These restriction enzymes are the basis of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) testing, used to detect DNA polymorphisms.Chemistry
The term methylation in organic chemistry refers to the alkylation process used to describe the delivery of a CH3 group. This is commonly performed using electrophilic methyl sources - iodomethane, dimethyl sulfate, dimethyl carbonate, or less commonly with the more powerful (and more dangerous) methylating reagents of methyl triflate or methyl fluorosulfonate (magic methyl), which all react via SN2 nucleophilic substitution. For example a carboxylate may be methylated on oxygen to give a methyl ester, an alkoxide salt RO− may be likewise methylated to give an ether, ROCH3, or a ketone enolate may be methylated on carbon to produce a new ketone.Alternatively, the methylation may involve use of
nucleophilic methyl
compounds such as methyllithium
(CH3Li) or Grignard
reagents (CH3MgX). For example, CH3Li will methylate acetone, adding across the
carbonyl (C=O) to give the
lithium alkoxide of
tert-butanol:
See also
- Bisulfite sequencing - the biochemical method used to determine the presence or absence of methyl groups on a DNA sequence
References
External links
- http://www.methdb.de/ DNA Methylation Database
- deltaMasses Detection of Methylations after Mass Spectrometry
methylate in German: Methylierung
methylate in Spanish: Metilación
methylate in Hebrew: מתילציה
methylate in Dutch: Methylatie
methylate in Japanese: メチル化反応
methylate in Polish: Metylowanie
methylate in Portuguese: Metilação
methylate in Russian: Метилирование
methylate in Urdu: میثائلیت
methylate in Chinese: 甲基化