Abstract

In our previous study using transgenic Muta mice, G:C --> A:T transitions at 5'-CG-3' (CpG) sites, which are the most common mammalian spontaneous mutation, were detected in 197 of 330 spontaneous lacZ mutants. These transitions were recovered at only 27 of the 357 mutable G:C pairs within CpG sites where the transition could produce a missense or termination codon in the lacZ gene. To address the underlying mechanism for the uneven distribution of mutated CpG sites, the CpG methylation status of the Muta lacZ gene was analyzed by a bisulfite method. All the CpG sites examined in the coding region were evenly methylated at a high level, and no site-specific methylation was evident. Analysis of the sequence context around the mutated CpG sites, however, revealed that 21 of these 27 sites contained a CpG flanked by a pyrimidine on the 5' side, and that 187 of the 197 mutants resulted from substitutions at these sites. Moreover, we found five hotspots among those sites, the location of which was intimately related to the enzymatic activity of the gene product: one site produced a nonsense codon; three sites, one of which corresponded to the nucleophile at the active site, resided in the substrate-binding pocket; and the other site was located in a region conserved in the beta-galactosidase family. These results strongly suggest that recovery of lacZ mutations at each site largely depend on the adjacent sequence context and the extent to which the mutation damages the enzymatic activity of the gene product.

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