Accession NumberHMDB03008
Common_NameBisulfite
DescriptionThe bisulfite ion is the HSO3- ion. It is the conjugate base of sulfurous acid, H2SO3. Bisulfite has long been recognized as a reagent to react with organic compounds in various ways; prominent among them are additions to carbonyl groups and to carbon-carbon double bonds, and free radical reactions in the presence of oxygen. Bisulfite reacts with pyrimidine nucleosides, undergoing additions to the 5,6-double bond to form pyrimidine- 5,6-dihydro-6-sulfonates. The addition across the 5,6-double bond is reversible. All these adducts are unstable in alkali. Bisulfite modification has been used to probe secondary or higher structures of polynucleotides as it reacts with pyrimidines in single-stranded regions specifically. In animal DNA, a portion of the pyrimidine base cytosine is methylated at position 5. 5-Methylcytosine in DNA is now an intensive focus of attention for its roles in gene functions. The methylation occurs by postreplication modification, and is a heritable event. 5-Methylcytosine sites are known to be mutation hot spots. 5-Methylcytosine spontaneously deaminates into thymine, while cytosine does so only more slowly. Determination of the position of 5-methylcytosine in a given DNA requires some means to distinguish 5- methylcytosine from cytosine. Chemical modification can be used as one such means. Treatment of DNA with bisulfite converts cytosine into uracil by deamination, while 5-methylcytosine remains mostly unaltered. The majority of recent research on 5-methylcytosine in DNA employs bisulfite treatment in the analytical procedure. The principle of this procedure is as follows. As uracil is a thymine-analog (5-methyluracil is thymine), it behaves toward DNA polymerases as thymine. When the bisulfite-modified DNA is subjected to PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction), a process necessary to amplify tiny samples of DNA, the uracil residues will become thymine residues in the amplified products. As 5-methylcytosine residues in the original DNA sample remain unaltered during the bisulfite treatment, the amplification will produce polynucleotides in which cytosine residues represent the 5-methylcytosine residues of the original. (Genes and Environment (2006), 28(1), 1-8.)
Chemical_IUPAC_Namesulfurous acid
Chemical FormulaH2O3S
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