Relationship between bona fide and putative DNA methyltransferases. Eukaryotic DMTs fall into four major classes: (i) de novo DMTs (DIM-2 and DNMT3) from N. crassa (Nc) and animals (Dr, D. rerio; Hs, H. sapiens); (ii) chromomethylases (CMT) from plants (At, A. thaliana; As, A. suecia; Aa, A. arenosa); (iii) maintenance DMTs (MET- and DNMT1-like) from plants (Nto, N. tabacum; Dc, D. carota; Ps, P. sativum, Zm, Z. mays), fungi (Ai, A. immersus Masc2), and animals (Xl, X. laevis; Gg, G. gallus; Mm, M. musculus; P/, P. lividus); and (iv) Masc1 homologues (Masc1, DmtA, RID) from fungi (En, E. nidulans; Af, A. fumigatus; Ng, N. galapagosensis; Nte, N. terricola; Nt, N. tetrasperma). Alignment of the catalytic domain of bona fide and putative DMTs was performed by clustalw analyses with default settings (39). The sequence of the bacterial DNA methyltransferase most closely related to RID, Neisseria gonorrhoeae VII methylase (M.NgoVII), was used as an outgroup. Proteins with known in vivo and/or in vitro DMT activity or phenotypes potentially associated with DNA methylation are shown in bold, whereas putative DMTs identified only by sequence homology are shown in plain type. For simplicity, we have not included the Dnmt2 group of putative DMTs (e.g., see ref. 33), because to date there are no indications that these proteins are involved in methylation.