Abstract

We have been studying the evolution and function of DNA methylation in vertebrate animals using three related approaches. The first is to further characterise proteins that bind to methylated DNA. Such proteins can be viewed as 'receptors' of the methyl-CpG 'ligand' that mediate downstream consequences of DNA modification. The second approach involves CpG islands. These patches of non-methylated DNA coincide with most gene promoters, but their origin and functional significance have only recently become the subject of intensive study. The third approach is to trace the evolution of DNA methylation. Genomic methylation patterns of vertebrates are strikingly different from those of invertebrates. By studying methylation in animals that diverged from common ancestors near to the invertebrate/vertebrate boundary, we will assess the possibility that changes in DNA methylation contributed causally to the evolution of the complex vertebrate lineage.

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