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1.
Base excision repair is a major pathway for the removal of simple lesions in DNA including base damage and base loss (abasic site). Base excision repair requires the coordinated action of several repair and ancillary proteins, the impairment of which can lead to genetic instability. Using a protein-DNA cross-linking assay during repair in human whole cell extracts, we monitored proteins involved in the initial steps of repair of a substrate containing a site-specific abasic site to address the molecular events following incision of the abasic site by AP endonuclease. We find that after dissociation of AP endonuclease from the incised abasic site, both DNA polymerase beta (Pol beta) and the DNA ligase IIIalpha-XRCC1 heterodimer efficiently bind/cross-link to the substrate DNA. We also find that the cross-linking efficacy of the DNA ligase IIIalpha-XRCC1 heterodimer was decreased about 2-fold in the Pol beta-deficient cell extract but was rescued by addition of purified wild type but not a mutant Pol beta protein that does not interact with the DNA ligase IIIalpha-XRCC1 heterodimer. We further demonstrate that Pol beta and the DNA ligase IIIalpha-XRCC1 heterodimer are present at equimolar concentrations in whole cell extracts and that Pol beta has a 7-fold higher affinity to the incised abasic site containing substrate than DNA ligase IIIalpha. Using gel filtration of whole cell extracts prepared at physiological salt conditions (0.15 M NaCl), we find no evidence for a stable preexisting complex of DNA Pol beta with the DNA ligase IIIalpha-XRCC1 heterodimer. Taken together, these data suggest that following incision by AP endonuclease, DNA Pol beta recognizes and binds to the incised abasic site and promotes recruitment of the DNA ligase IIIalpha-XRCC1 heterodimer through its interaction with XRCC1.  相似文献   

2.
Oxidized abasic sites are a major form of DNA damage induced by free radical attack and deoxyribose oxidation. 2-Deoxyribonolactone (dL) is a C1'-oxidized abasic site implicated in DNA strand breakage, mutagenesis, and formation of covalent DNA-protein cross-links (DPCs) with repair enzymes such as DNA polymerase beta (polbeta). We show here that mammalian cell-free extracts incubated with Ape1-incised dL substrates under non-repair conditions give rise to DPCs, with a major species dependent on the presence of polbeta. DPC formation was much less under repair than non-repair conditions, with extracts of either polbeta-proficient or -deficient cells. Partial base excision DNA repair (BER) reconstituted with purified enzymes demonstrated that Flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1) efficiently excises a displaced oligonucleotide containing a 5'-terminal dL residue, as would be produced during long-patch (multinucleotide) BER. Simultaneous monitoring of dL repair and dL-mediated DPC formation demonstrated that removal of the dL residue through the combined action of strand-displacement DNA synthesis by polbeta and excision by FEN1 markedly diminished DPC formation with the polymerase. Analysis of the patch size distribution associated with DNA repair synthesis in cell-free extracts showed that the processing of dL residues is associated with the synthesis of >or=2 nucleotides, compared with predominantly single nucleotide replacement for regular abasic sites. Our observations reveal a cellular repair process for dL lesions that avoids formation of DPCs that would threaten the integrity of DNA and perhaps cell viability.  相似文献   

3.
Base excision repair (BER) is a defense system that protects cells from deleterious effects secondary to modified or missing DNA bases. BER is known to involve apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (APE) and DNA polymerase ss (ss-pol) among other enzymes, and recent studies have suggested that poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) also plays a role by virtue of its binding to BER intermediates. The main role of APE is cleavage of the DNA backbone at abasic sites, and the enzyme also can catalyze 3'- to 5'-exonuclease activity at the cleaved abasic site. Photocross-linking studies with mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cell extracts described here indicated that APE and PARP-1 interact with the same APE-cleaved abasic site BER intermediate. The model BER intermediate used includes a synthetic abasic site sugar, i.e. tetrahydrofuran (THF), in place of the natural deoxyribose. APE cross-linked efficiently with this intermediate, but not with a molecule lacking the 5'-THF phosphate group, and the same property was demonstrated for PARP-1. The addition of purified APE to the MEF extract reduced the amount of PARP-1 cross-linked to the BER intermediate, suggesting that APE can compete with PARP-1. APE and PARP-1 were antagonists of each other in in vitro BER related reactions on this model BER intermediate. These results suggest that PARP-1 and APE can interact with the same BER intermediate and that competition between these two proteins may influence their respective BER related functions.  相似文献   

4.
Background: The base excision–repair pathway is the major cellular defence mechanism against spontaneous DNA damage. The enzymes involved have been highly conserved during evolution. Base excision–repair has been reproduced previously with crude cell-free extracts of bacterial or human origin. To further our understanding of base excision–repair, we have attempted to reconstitute the pathway in vitro using purified enzymes.Results We report here the successful reconstitution of the base excision–repair pathway with five purified enzymes from Escherichia coli: uracil-DNA glycosylase, a representative of the DNA glycosylases that remove various lesions from DNA; the AP endonuclease IV that specifically cleaves at abasic sites; RecJ protein which excises a 5′ terminal deoxyribose-phosphate residue; DNA polymerase I; and DNA ligase. The reaction proceeds with high efficiency in the absence of additional factors in the reconstituted system. Four of the enzymes are absolutely required for completion of the repair reaction. An unusual feature we have discovered is that the pathway branches after enzymatic incision at an abasic DNA site. RecJ protein is required for the major reaction, which involves replacement of only a single nucleotide at the damaged site; in its absence, an alternative pathway is observed, with generation of longer repair patches by the 5′ nuclease function of DNA polymerase I.Conclusion Repair of uracil in DNA is achieved by a very short-patch excision–repair process involving five different enzymes. No additional protein factors seem to be required. There is a minor, back-up pathway that uses replication factors to generate longer repair patches.  相似文献   

5.
Covalently closed circular DNA containing a synthetic analog of an abasic site at a unique position was used as a substrate to study DNA repair. Incubation of this DNA in Xenopus laevis oocyte extracts resulted in rapid cleavage of the DNA at the abasic site by a class II apurinic-apyrimidinic endonuclease, followed by complete repair within 40 min. Nicked circular DNAs persisted for several minutes before repair by an ATP-dependent DNA synthesis reaction. The repair-related DNA synthesis was localized within 3 or 4 nucleotides surrounding the abasic site. These results are consistent with the short-patch repair reported for DNA damage at heterogeneous sites in human cells (J. D. Regan and R. B. Setlow, Cancer Res. 34:3318-3325, 1974).  相似文献   

6.
In mammalian cells the majority of altered bases in DNA are processed through a single-nucleotide patch base excision repair mechanism. Base excision repair is initiated by a DNA glycosylase that removes a damaged base and generates an abasic site (AP site). This AP site is further processed by an AP endonuclease activity that incises the phosphodiester bond adjacent to the AP site and generates a strand break containing 3'-OH and 5'-sugar phosphate ends. In mammalian cells, the 5'-sugar phosphate is removed by the AP lyase activity of DNA polymerase beta (Pol beta). The same enzyme also fills the gap, and the DNA ends are finally rejoined by DNA ligase. We measured repair of oligonucleotide substrates containing a single AP site in cell extracts prepared from normal and Pol beta-null mouse cells and show that the reduced repair in Pol beta-null extracts can be complemented by addition of purified Pol beta. Using this complementation assay, we demonstrate that mutated Pol beta without dRPase activity is able to stimulate long patch BER. Mutant Pol beta deficient in DNA synthesis, but with normal dRPase activity, does not stimulate repair in Pol beta-null cells. However, under conditions where we measure base excision repair accomplished exclusively through a single-nucleotide patch BER, neither dRPase nor DNA synthesis mutants of Pol beta alone, or the two together, were able to complement the repair defect. These data suggest that the dRPase and DNA synthesis activities of Pol beta are coupled and that both of these Pol beta functions are essential during short patch BER and cannot be efficiently substituted by other cellular enzymes.  相似文献   

7.
To examine the interaction of mammalian base excision repair (BER) enzymes with DNA intermediates formed during BER, we used a novel photoaffinity labeling probe and mouse embryonic fibroblast cellular extracts. The probe was formed in situ, using an end-labeled oligonucleotide containing a synthetic abasic site; this site was incised by apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease creating a nick with 3'-hydroxyl and 5'-reduced sugar phosphate groups at the margins, and then a dNMP carrying a photoreactive adduct was added to the 3'-hydroxyl group. With near-UV light (312 nm) exposure of the extract/probe mixture, six proteins were strongly labeled. Four of these include poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) and the BER participants flap endonuclease-1, DNA polymerase beta, and apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease. The amount of the probe cross-linked to PARP-1 was greater than that cross-linked to the other proteins. The specificity of PARP-1 labeling was examined using various competitor oligonucleotides and DNA probes with alternate structures. PARP-1 labeling was stronger with a DNA representing a BER intermediate than with a nick in double-stranded DNA. These results indicate that proteins interacting preferentially with a photoreactive BER intermediate can be selected from the crude cellular extract.  相似文献   

8.
Tian K  McTigue M  de los Santos C 《DNA Repair》2002,1(12):1039-1049
Clustered DNA damage is a hallmark of ionizing radiation. These complex lesions, composed of any combination of oxidized bases, abasic sites, or strand breaks within one helical turn, create a tremendous challenge for the base excision repair system, which must process the damage without generating cytotoxic double strand breaks (DSB). Clustered lesions affect the DNA incision activity of DNA glycosylases and AP endonucleases. Different levels of enzyme inhibition are dependent on lesion identity, orientation and separation. Very little is known about the simultaneous action of both classes of enzymes, which may lead to the creation of DSB. We have developed a novel substrate system of double-labeled hairpin duplexes, which allows the simultaneous determination of enzyme incision and formation of DBS. We use this system to study the processing of four clustered 8-oxoguanine/abasic site lesions by purified mouse Ogg1, human Ape1 and mouse embryonic stem cell nuclear extracts. Ape1 activity is least affected by the presence of a nearby oxidized base. In contrast, an abasic site inhibits the glycosylase and lyase activities of Ogg1 in an orientation-dependent manner. The combined action of both enzymes leads to the preferential formation of DSB with 5'-overhang ends. Processing of clusters by nuclear extracts displayed similar patter of enzyme inhibition and the same preference for avoiding double strand breaks with 3'-overhang ends.  相似文献   

9.
Greenberg MM  Weledji YN  Kroeger KM  Kim J 《Biochemistry》2004,43(48):15217-15222
Abasic lesions are unable to form Watson-Crick hydrogen bonds with nucleotides. Nonetheless, polymerase and repair enzymes distinguish between various oxidized abasic lesions, as well as from nonoxidized abasic sites (AP). The C2-AP lesion is produced when DNA is exposed to gamma-radiolysis. Its effects on polymerases and repair enzymes are unknown. A recently reported method for the chemical synthesis of oligonucleotides containing C2-AP at a defined site was utilized for studying the activity of Klenow exo(-) and repair enzymes on templates containing the lesion. The C2-AP lesion has a similar effect on Klenow exo(-) as do AP and C4-AP sites. Deoxyadenosine is preferentially incorporated opposite C2-AP, but extension of the primer past the lesion is strongly blocked. C2-AP is incised less efficiently by exonuclease III and endonuclease IV than are other abasic lesions. Furthermore, although a Schiff base between C2-AP and endonuclease III can be chemically trapped, the location of the 3'-phosphate alpha with respect to the aldehyde prevents beta-elimination associated with the lyase activity of type I base excision repair enzymes. The interactions of the C2'-oxidized abasic site with Klenow exo(-) and repair enzymes suggest that the lesion will be mutagenic and that it will be removed by strand displacement synthesis and flap endonuclease processing via a long patch repair mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
Sleeth KM  Robson RL  Dianov GL 《Biochemistry》2004,43(40):12924-12930
In mammalian cells, DNA ligase IIIalpha and DNA ligase I participate in the short- and long-patch base excision repair pathways, respectively. Using an in vitro repair assay employing DNA ligase-depleted cell extracts and DNA substrates containing a single lesion repaired either through short-patch (regular abasic site) or long-patch (reduced abasic site) base excision repair pathways, we addressed the question whether DNA ligases are specific to each pathway or if they are exchangeable. We find that immunodepletion of DNA ligase I did not affect the short-patch repair pathway but blocked long-patch repair, suggesting that DNA ligase IIIalpha is not able to substitute DNA ligase I during long-patch repair. In contrast, immunodepletion of DNA ligase IIIalpha did not significantly affect either pathway. Moreover, repair of normal abasic sites in wild-type and X-ray cross-complementing gene 1 (XRCC1)-DNA ligase IIIalpha-immunodepleted cell extracts involved similar proportions of short- and long-patch repair events. This suggests that DNA ligase I was able to efficiently substitute the XRCC1-DNA ligase IIIalpha complex during short-patch repair.  相似文献   

11.
One of the most abundant lesions in DNA is the abasic (AP) sites arising spontaneously or as an intermediate in base excision repair. Certain proteins participating in the processing of these lesions form a Schiff base with the deoxyribose of the AP site. This intermediate can be stabilized by NaBH(4) treatment. By this method, DNA duplexes with AP sites were used to trap proteins in cell extracts. In HeLa cell extract, along with a prevalent trap product with an apparent molecular mass of 95 kDa, less intensive low-molecular-weight products were observed. The major one was identified as the p80-subunit of Ku antigen (Ku). Ku antigen, a DNA binding component of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), participates in double-stranded break repair and is responsible for the resistance of cells to ionizing radiation. The specificity of Ku interaction with AP sites was proven by more efficient competition of DNA duplexes with an analogue of abasic site than non-AP DNA. Ku80 was cross-linked to AP DNAs with different efficiencies depending on the size and position of strand interruptions opposite to AP sites. Ku antigen as a part of DNA-PK was shown to inhibit AP site cleavage by apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1.  相似文献   

12.
Nucleotide insertion kinetics opposite abasic lesions in DNA   总被引:28,自引:0,他引:28  
A gel assay is introduced to measure DNA polymerase insertion kinetics at single sites along a DNA template strand. The assay is used to analyze the kinetics of inserting deoxynucleotides opposite a synthetic abasic (apurinic/apyrimidinic) lesions using Drosophila DNA polymerase alpha. The location of the abasic lesion next to different nearest-neighbor bases allows the effects of base stacking on the specificity of insertion to be evaluated. The specificity of nucleotide insertion, Vmax/Km, is 6-11 times greater for A over G and about 20-50 times greater for A over C and T. The insertion specificity at the abasic lesion appears to depend more on differences in Vmax than Km. Apparent Michaelis constants for inserting A and G deoxynucleotides are similar to within about a factor of 2. The insertion of A or G occurs most efficiently at the abasic lesion when T is the 5'-nearest neighbor on the primer strand and least efficiently when G is the 5'-nearest neighbor. The presence of different base stacking partners adjacent to the site of insertion has up to a 4-fold effect on specificity.  相似文献   

13.
DNA mismatch repair detected in human cell extracts.   总被引:8,自引:5,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
A system to study mismatch repair in vitro in HeLa cell extracts was developed. Preformed heteroduplex plasmid DNA containing two single base pair mismatches within the SupF gene of Escherichia coli was used as a substrate in a mismatch repair assay. Repair of one or both of the mismatches to the wild-type sequence was measured by transformation of a lac(Am) E. coli strain in which the presence of an active supF gene could be scored. The E. coli strain used was constructed to carry mutations in genes associated with mismatch repair and recombination (mutH, mutU, and recA) so that the processing of the heteroduplex DNA by the bacterium was minimal. Extract reactions were carried out by the incubation of the heteroduplex plasmid DNA in the HeLa cell extracts to which ATP, creatine phosphate, creatine kinase, deoxynucleotides, and a magnesium-containing buffer were added. Under these conditions about 1% of the mismatches were repaired. In the absence of added energy sources or deoxynucleotides, the activity in the extracts was significantly reduced. The addition of either aphidicolin or dideoxynucleotides reduced the mismatch repair activity, but only aphidicolin was effective in blocking DNA polymerization in the extracts. It is concluded that mismatch repair in these extracts is an energy-requiring process that is dependent on an adequate deoxynucleotide concentration. The results also indicate that the process is associated with some type of DNA polymerization, but the different effects of aphidicolin and dideoxynucleotides suggest that the mismatch repair activity in the extracts cannot simply be accounted for by random nick-translation activity alone.  相似文献   

14.
Clustered DNA damage, where two or more lesions are located proximally to each other, is frequently induced by ionizing radiation. Individual base lesions within a cluster are repaired by base excision repair. In this study we addressed the question of how thymine glycol (Tg) within a cluster would affect the repair of opposing lesions by human cell extracts. We have found that Tg located opposite to an abasic site does not affect cleavage of this site by apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease. However, Tg significantly compromised the next step of the repair. Although purified DNA polymerase beta was able to incorporate the correct nucleotide (dAMP) opposite to Tg, the rate of incorporation was reduced by 3-fold. Tg does not affect 5'-sugar phosphate removal by the 2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate (dRP) lyase activity of DNA polymerase beta, but further processing of the strand break by purified DNA ligase III was slightly diminished. In agreement with these findings, although an AP site located opposite to Tg was efficiently incised in human cell extract, only a limited amount of fully repaired product was observed, suggesting that such clustered DNA lesions may have a significantly increased lifetime in human cells compared with similar single-standing lesions.  相似文献   

15.
Double strand breaks (DSB) are severe DNA lesions, and if not properly repaired, may lead to cell death or cancer. While there is considerable data on the repair of simple DSB (sDSB) by non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ), little is known about the repair of complex DSBs (cDSB), namely breaks with a nearby modification, which precludes ligation without prior processing. To study the mechanism of cDSB repair we developed a plasmid-based shuttle assay for the repair of a defined site-specific cDSB in cultured mammalian cells. Using this assay we found that repair efficiency and accuracy of a cDSB with an abasic site in a 5′ overhang was reduced compared with a sDSB. Translesion DNA synthesis (TLS) across the abasic site located at the break prevented loss of DNA sequences, but was highly mutagenic also at the template base next to the abasic site. Similar to sDSB repair, cDSB repair was totally dependent on XrccIV, and altered in the absence of Ku80. In contrast, Artemis appears to be specifically involved in cDSB repair. These results may indicate that mammalian cells have a damage control strategy, whereby severe deletions are prevented at the expense of the less deleterious point mutations during NHEJ.  相似文献   

16.
Wong HK  Kim D  Hogue BA  McNeill DR  Wilson DM 《Biochemistry》2005,44(43):14335-14343
Base excision repair (BER) is the major corrective pathway for most spontaneous, oxidative, and alkylation DNA base and sugar damage. X-ray cross-complementing 1 (XRCC1) has been suggested to function at nearly every step of this repair process, primarily through direct protein-protein interactions. Using whole cell extract (WCE) repair assays and DNA damage measurement techniques, we examined systematically the quantitative contribution of XRCC1 to specific biochemical steps of BER and single-strand break repair (SSBR). Our studies reveal that XRCC1-deficient Chinese hamster ovary WCEs exhibit normal base excision activity for 8-oxoguanine (8-OH-dG), 5-hydroxycytosine, ethenoadenine, and uracil lesions. Moreover, XRCC1 mutant EM9 cells possess steady-state levels of endogenous 8-OH-dG base damage similar to those of their wild-type counterparts. Abasic site incision activity was found to be normal in XRCC1-deficient cell extracts, as were the levels of abasic sites in isolated chromosomal DNA from mutant cells. While one- and five-nucleotide gap filling was not affected by XRCC1 status, a significant approximately 2-4-fold reduction in nick ligation activity was observed in EM9 WCEs. Our results herein suggest that the primary biochemical defect associated with XRCC1 deficiency is in the ligation step of BER/SSBR, and that XRCC1 plays no significant role in endogenous base damage and abasic site repair, or in promoting the polymerase gap-filling step.  相似文献   

17.
Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP-1) is an abundant nuclear protein with a high affinity for single- and double-strand DNA breaks. Its binding to strand breaks promotes catalysis of the covalent modification of nuclear proteins with poly(ADP-ribose) synthesised from NAD(+). PARP-1-knockout cells are extremely sensitive to alkylating agents, suggesting the involvement of PARP-1 in base excision repair; however, its role remains unclear. We investigated the dependence of base excision repair pathways on PARP-1 and NAD(+) using whole cell extracts derived from normal and PARP-1 deficient mouse cells and DNA substrates containing abasic sites. In normal extracts the rate of repair was highly dependent on NAD(+). We found that in the absence of NAD(+) repair was slowed down 4-6-fold after incision of the abasic site. We also established that in extracts from PARP-1 deficient mouse cells, repair of both regular and reduced abasic sites was increased with respect to normal extracts and was NAD(+)-independent, suggesting that in both short- and long-patch BER PARP-1 slows down, rather than stimulates, the repair reaction. Our data support the proposal that PARP-1 does not play a major role in catalysis of DNA damage processing via either base excision repair pathway.  相似文献   

18.
Abasic sites are highly mutagenic lesions in DNA that arise as intermediates in the excision repair of modified bases. These sites are generated by the action of damage-specific DNA glycosylases and are converted into downstream intermediates by the specific activity of apurinic/apyrimidinic endonucleases. Enzymes in both families have been observed in crystal structures to impose deformations on the abasic-site DNA, including DNA kinking and base flipping. On the basis of these apparent protein-induced deformations, we propose that altered conformation and dynamics of abasic sites may contribute to the specificity of these repair enzymes. Previously, measurements of the steady-state fluorescence of the adenine analogue 2-aminopurine (2AP) opposite an abasic site demonstrated that binding of divalent cations could induce a conformational change that increased the accessibility of 2AP to solute quenching [Stivers, J. T. (1998) Nucleic Acids Res. 26, 3837-44]. We have performed time-resolved fluorescence experiments to characterize the states involved in this conformational change. Interpretation of these studies is based on a recently developed model attributing the static and dynamic fluorescence quenching of 2AP in DNA to aromatic stacking and collisional interactions with neighboring bases, respectively (see the preceding paper in this issue). The time-resolved fluorescence results indicate that divalent cation binding shifts the equilibrium of the abasic site between two conformations: a "closed" state, characterized by short average fluorescence lifetime and complex decay kinetics, and an "open" state, characterized by monoexponential decay with lifetime approximately that of the free nucleoside. Because the lifetime and intensity decay kinetics of 2AP incorporated into DNA are sensitive primarily to collisional interactions with the neighboring bases, the absence of dynamic quenching in the open state strongly suggests that the fluorescent base is extrahelical in this conformation. Consistent with this interpretation, time-resolved quenching studies reveal that the open state is accessible to solute quenching by potassium iodide, but the closed state is not. Greater static quenching is observed in the abasic site when the fluorescent base is flanked by 5'- and 3'-thymines than in the context of 5'- and 3'-adenines, indicating that 2AP is more stacked with the neighboring bases in the former sequence. These results imply that the conformation of the abasic site varies in a sequence-dependent manner. Undamaged sequences in which the abasic site is replaced by thymine do not exhibit an open state and have different levels of both static and dynamic quenching than their damaged homologues. These differences in structure and dynamics may be significant determinants of the high specific affinity of repair enzymes for the abasic site.  相似文献   

19.
One of the most frequent lesions formed in cellular DNA are abasic (apurinic/apyrimidinic, AP) sites that are both cytotoxic and mutagenic, and must be removed efficiently to maintain genetic stability. It is generally believed that the repair of AP sites is initiated by the AP endonucleases; however, an alternative pathway seems to prevail in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. A mutant lacking the DNA glycosylase/AP lyase Nth1 is very sensitive to the alkylating agent methyl methanesulfonate (MMS), suggesting a role for Nth1 in base excision repair (BER) of alkylation damage. Here, we have further evaluated the role of Nth1 and the second putative S.pombe AP endonuclease Apn2, in abasic site repair. The deletion of the apn2 open reading frame dramatically increased the sensitivity of the yeast cells to MMS, also demonstrating that the Apn2 has an important function in the BER pathway. The deletion of nth1 in the apn2 mutant strain partially relieves the MMS sensitivity of the apn2 single mutant, indicating that the Apn2 and Nth1 act in the same pathway for the repair of abasic sites. Analysis of the AP site cleavage in whole cell extracts of wild-type and mutant strains showed that the AP lyase activity of Nth1 represents the major AP site incision activity in vitro. Assays with DNA substrates containing base lesions removed by monofunctional DNA glycosylases Udg and MutY showed that Nth1 will also cleave the abasic sites formed by these enzymes and thus act downstream of these enzymes in the BER pathway. We suggest that the main function of Apn2 in BER is to remove the resulting 3′-blocking termini following AP lyase cleavage by Nth1.  相似文献   

20.
The mitochondrial genome is highly susceptible to damage by reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated endogenously as a byproduct of respiration. ROS-induced DNA lesions, including oxidized bases, abasic (AP) sites, and oxidized AP sites, cause DNA strand breaks and are repaired via the base excision repair (BER) pathway in both the nucleus and mitochondria. Repair of damaged bases and AP sites involving 1-nucleotide incorporation, named single nucleotide (SN)-BER, was observed with mitochondrial and nuclear extracts. During SN-BER, the 5'-phosphodeoxyribose (dRP) moiety, generated by AP-endonuclease (APE1), is removed by the lyase activity of DNA polymerase gamma (pol gamma) and polymerase beta in the mitochondria and nucleus, respectively. However, the repair of oxidized deoxyribose fragments at the 5' terminus after strand break would require 5'-exo/endonuclease activity that is provided by the flap endonuclease (FEN-1) in the nucleus, resulting in multinucleotide repair patch (long patch (LP)-BER). Here we show the presence of a 5'-exo/endonuclease in the mitochondrial extracts of mouse and human cells that is involved in the repair of a lyase-resistant AP site analog via multinucleotide incorporation, upstream and downstream to the lesion site. We conclude that LP-BER also occurs in the mitochondria requiring the 5'-exo/endonuclease and pol gamma with 3'-exonuclease activity. Although a FEN-1 antibody cross-reacting species was detected in the mitochondria, it was absent in the LP-BER-proficient APE1 immunocomplex isolated from the mitochondrial extract that contains APE1, pol gamma, and DNA ligase 3. The LP-BER activity was marginally affected in FEN-1-depleted mitochondrial extracts, further supporting the involvement of an unidentified 5'-exo/endonuclease in mitochondrial LP-BER.  相似文献   

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