Bacterial Epigenomes: Technology, Pathogens and Microbiome

Speaker
  • Gang Fang

    Associate Processor, Genomics Department, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
    BIOGRAPHY

Abstract

Prokaryotic DNA contains three types of methylation: N6-methyladenine, N4-methylcytosine and 5-methylcytosine. The lack of tools to analyse the frequency and distribution of methylated residues in bacterial genomes has prevented a full understanding of their functions. Now, advances in DNA sequencing technology, including single-molecule, real-time sequencing and nanopore-based sequencing, have provided new opportunities for systematic detection of all three forms of methylated DNA at a genome-wide scale and offer unprecedented opportunities for achieving a more complete understanding of bacterial epigenomes. Indeed, as the number of mapped bacterial methylomes approaches 2,000, increasing evidence supports roles for methylation in regulation of gene expression, virulence and pathogen–host interactions.

Learning Objectives:

1. What are the state of the art methods for mapping bacterial DNA methylation?

2. How can we exploit bacterial DNA methylation to better understand bacteria and microbiome?