Principle within the nucleus of a cell. The enzyme Dam (green) is fused to the protein of interest (orange) by expression of a chimeric DNA sequence. The protein of interest drags Dam onto its cognate targets. The tethering leads to methylation of GATCs in the neighborhood of the binding site (red) but not at a distance. N6-methyladenine (m6A) is the product of the addition of a
methyl group (CH3) at position 6 of the adenine. This modified nucleotide is absent from the vast majority of eukaryotes, with the exception of
C. elegans, but is widespread in bacterial genomes, as part of the
restriction modification or
DNA repair systems. In
Escherichia coli, adenine methylation is catalyzed by the adenine methyltransferase
Dam (DNA adenine methyltransferase), which catalyses adenine methylation exclusively in the palindromic sequence GATC. Ectopic expression of Dam in eukaryotic cells leads to methylation of adenine in GATC sequences without any other noticeable side effect. Based on this, DamID consists in fusing Dam to a protein of interest (usually a protein that interacts with DNA such as
transcription factors) or a chromatin component. The protein of interest thus targets Dam to its cognate
in vivo binding site, resulting in the methylation of neighboring GATCs. The presence of m6A, coinciding with the binding sites of the proteins of interest, is revealed by
methyl PCR.
Methyl PCR In this assay the genome is digested by
DpnI, which cuts only methylated GATCs. Double-stranded adapters with a known sequence are then ligated to the ends generated by DpnI. Ligation products are then digested by
DpnII. This enzyme cuts non-methylated GATCs, ensuring that only fragments flanked by
consecutive methylated GATCs are amplified in the subsequent PCR. A PCR with primers matching the adaptors is then carried out, leading to the specific amplification of genomic fragments flanked by methylated GATCs.
Specificities of DamID versus Chromatin Immuno-Precipitation Chromatin Immuno-Precipitation, or (ChIP), is an alternative method to assay protein binding at specific loci of the genome. Unlike ChIP, DamID does not require a specific
antibody against the protein of interest. On the one hand, this allows to map proteins for which no such antibody is available. On the other hand, this makes it impossible to specifically map
posttranslationally modified proteins. Another fundamental difference is that ChIP assays where the protein of interests
is at a given time, whereas DamID assays where it
has been. The reason is that m6A stays in the DNA after the Dam fusion protein goes away. For proteins that are either bound or unbound on their target sites this does not change the big picture. However, this can lead to strong differences in the case of proteins that slide along the DNA (
e.g. RNA polymerase). == Known biases and technical issues ==