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1.
Fourteen genetic neurodegenerative diseases and three fragile sites have been associated with the expansion of (CTG)n•(CAG)n, (CGG)n•(CCG)n, or (GAA)n•(TTC)n repeat tracts. Different models have been proposed for the expansion of triplet repeats, most of which presume the formation of alternative DNA structures in repeat tracts. One of the most likely structures, slipped strand DNA, may stably and reproducibly form within triplet repeat sequences. The propensity to form slipped strand DNA is proportional to the length and homogeneity of the repeat tract. The remarkable stability of slipped strand DNA may, in part, be due to loop-loop interactions facilitated by the sequence complementarity of the loops and the dynamic structure of three-way junctions formed at the loop-outs.  相似文献   

2.
The secondary structure of DNA has been shown to be an important component in the mechanism of expansion of the trinucleotide repeats that are associated with many neurodegenerative disorders. Recently, expansion of a dodecamer repeat, (CCCCGCCCCGCG)n upstream of cystatin B gene has been shown to be the most common mutation associated with Progressive Myoclonus Epilepsy (EPM1) of Unverricht-Lundborg type. We have investigated structure of oligonucleotides containing one, two and three copies of the EPM1 repeat sequences at physiological pH. CD spectra and anomalous faster gel electrophoretic mobilty indicates formation of intramolecularly folded structures that are formed independent of concentration. Hydroxylamine probing allowed us to identify the C residues that are involved in C.G base pairing. P1 nuclease studies elucidated the presence of unpaired regions in the folded back structures. UV melting studies show biphasic melting curves for the oligonucleotides containing two and three EPM1 repeats. Our data suggests multiple hairpin structures for two and three repeat containing oligonucleotides. In this paper we show that oligonucleotides containing EPM1 repeat adopt secondary structures that may facilitate strand slippage thereby causing the expansion.  相似文献   

3.
Trinucleotide repeats associated with human disease.   总被引:16,自引:4,他引:12       下载免费PDF全文
M Mitas 《Nucleic acids research》1997,25(12):2245-2254
Triplet repeat expansion diseases (TREDs) are characterized by the coincidence of disease manifestation with amplification of d(CAG. CTG), d(CGG.CCG) or d(GAA.TTC) repeats contained within specific genes. Amplification of triplet repeats continues in offspring of affected individuals, which generally results in progressive severity of the disease and/or an earlier age of onset, phenomena clinically referred to as 'anticipation'. Recent biophysical and biochemical studies reveal that five of the six [d(CGG)n, d(CCG)n, (CAG)n, d(CTG)n and d(GAA)n] complementary sequences that are associated with human disease form stable hairpin structures. Although the triplet repeat sequences d(GAC)n and d(GTC)n also form hairpins, repeats of the double-stranded forms of these sequences are conspicuously absent from DNA sequence databases and are not anticipated to be associated with human disease. With the exception of d(GAG)n and d(GTG)n, the remaining triplet repeat sequences are unlikely to form hairpin structures at physiological salt and temperature. The details of hairpin structures containing trinucleotide repeats are summarized and discussed with respect to potential mechanisms of triplet repeat expansion and d(CGG.CCG) n methylation/demethylation.  相似文献   

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6.
Triplet repeat disease is a group of hereditary neurodegenerative disorders caused by expansion of trinucleotide repeats such as CAG/CTG, CGG/CCG, and GAA/TTC. Direct detection of the expansion in the patient's genome shortcuts the tedious process needed for identification of disease genes by conventional approaches. Here we describe a method to detect triplet repeat expansion from the hybridization signal intensity. Using a digoxigenin-labeled (CTG)9 probe, the hybridization intensity and number of repeats showed a good linear correlation. The technique detected expansion in genomic DNA in all cases with moderate or large expansion. Even in the case of a small expansion, this method could detect the mutant fragment. The technique has advantages over related techniques because it is more sensitive and can be applied to cases where a small repeat expansion is involved.  相似文献   

7.
Trinucleotide repeat expansion provides a molecular basis for several devastating neurodegenerative diseases. In particular, expansion of a CAG run in the human HTT gene causes Huntington’s disease. One of the main reasons for triplet repeat expansion in somatic cells is base excision repair (BER), involving damaged base excision and repair DNA synthesis that may be accompanied by expansion of the repaired strand due to formation of noncanonical DNA structures. We have analyzed the kinetics of excision of a ubiquitously found oxidized purine base, 8-oxoguanine (oxoG), by DNA glycosylase OGG1 from the substrates containing a CAG run flanked by AT-rich sequences. The values of k 2 rate constant for the removal of oxoG from triplets in the middle of the run were higher than for oxoG at the flanks of the run. The value of k 3 rate constant dropped starting from the third CAG-triplet in the run and remained stable until the 3′-terminal triplet, where it decreased even more. In nuclear extracts, the profile of oxoG removal rate along the run resembled the profile of k 2 constant, suggesting that the reaction rate in the extracts is limited by base excision. The fully reconstituted BER was efficient with all substrates unless oxoG was near the 3′-flank of the run, interfering with the initiation of the repair. DNA polymerase β was able to perform a strand-displacement DNA synthesis, which may be important for CAG run expansion initiated by BER.  相似文献   

8.
Chi LM  Lam SL 《Nucleic acids research》2005,33(5):1604-1617
CTG triplet repeat sequences have been found to form slipped-strand structures leading to self-expansion during DNA replication. The lengthening of these repeats causes the onset of neurodegenerative diseases, such as myotonic dystrophy. In this study, electrophoretic and NMR spectroscopic studies have been carried out to investigate the length and the structural roles of CTG repeats in affecting the hairpin formation propensity. Direct NMR evidence has been successfully obtained the first time to support the presence of three types of hairpin structures in sequences containing 1–10 CTG repeats. The first type contains no intra-loop hydrogen bond and occurs when the number of repeats is less than four. The second type has a 4 nt TGCT-loop and occurs in sequences with even number of repeats. The third type contains a 3 nt CTG-loop and occurs in sequences with odd number of repeats. Although stabilizing interactions have been identified between CTG repeats in both the second and third types of hairpins, the structural differences observed account for the higher hairpin formation propensity in sequences containing even number of CTG repeats. The results of this study confirm the hairpin loop structures and explain how slippage occurs during DNA replication.  相似文献   

9.
Dixon MJ  Lahue RS 《DNA Repair》2002,1(9):763-770
Triplet repeats undergo frequent mutations in human families afflicted with certain neurodegenerative diseases and also in model organisms. Although the molecular mechanisms of triplet repeat instability are still being identified, it is likely that aberrant DNA synthesis plays an important role. Many DNA polymerases stall at triplet repeat sequences, probably due to the adoption of unusual DNA secondary structures. One possible mechanism to explain triplet repeat contractions is that a triplet repeat hairpin on the template strand inhibits replicative polymerases and that one or more bypass polymerases are recruited for synthesis past the hairpin. If the translesion synthesis is mutagenic, contractions can be generated. To address this possibility, Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains lacking either pol zeta (rev7), pol eta (rad30), or both were tested for trinucleotide repeat (TNR) contractions using three separate, sensitive genetic assays. If these bypass polymerases are important for mutagenesis, then the mutants should show a reduction in the contraction rate. Two genetic tests for triplet repeat contractions showed no significant change for the mutants compared to wild type. A third assay showed a five-fold reduction in contraction rates due to pol eta ablation. Despite this modest decrease, the overall contraction rate was still high, indicating that many deletions still occur in the absence of both polymerases. Expansion rates were also unaffected in the mutant strains. These results indicate that, in yeast, pol eta and pol zeta most likely have little role in triplet repeat mutagenesis.  相似文献   

10.
A variety of neurodegenerative disorders are associated with the expansion of trinucleotide repeat (TNR) sequences. These repetitive sequences are prone to adopting non-canonical structures, such as intrastrand stem-loop hairpins. Indeed, the formation and persistence of these hairpins during DNA replication and/or repair have been proposed as factors that facilitate TNR expansion. Given this proposed contribution of TNR hairpins to the expansion mechanism, disruption of such structures via strand invasion offers a potential means to negate the disease-initiating expansion. In this work, we investigated the strand invading abilities of a (CTG)3 unstructured nucleic acid on a (CAG)10 TNR hairpin. Using fluorescence, optical, and electrophoretic methods, instantaneous disruption of the (CAG)10 hairpin by (CTG)3 was observed at low temperatures. Additionally, we have identified three distinct duplex-like species that form between (CAG)10 and (CTG)3; these include 1, 2, or 3 (CTG)3 sequences hybridized to (CAG)10. The results presented here showcase (CTG)3 as an invader of a TNR hairpin and suggest that unstructured nucleic acids could serve as a scaffold to design agents to prevent TNR expansion.  相似文献   

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12.
Repeat instability: mechanisms of dynamic mutations   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Disease-causing repeat instability is an important and unique form of mutation that is linked to more than 40 neurological, neurodegenerative and neuromuscular disorders. DNA repeat expansion mutations are dynamic and ongoing within tissues and across generations. The patterns of inherited and tissue-specific instability are determined by both gene-specific cis-elements and trans-acting DNA metabolic proteins. Repeat instability probably involves the formation of unusual DNA structures during DNA replication, repair and recombination. Experimental advances towards explaining the mechanisms of repeat instability have broadened our understanding of this mutational process. They have revealed surprising ways in which metabolic pathways can drive or protect from repeat instability.  相似文献   

13.
The expansion of trinucleotide repeat sequences associated with hereditary neurological diseases is believed from earlier studies to be due to errors in DNA replication. However, more recent studies have indicated that recombination may play a significant role in triplet repeat expansion. CAG repeat tracts have been shown to induce double-strand breaks (DSBs) during meiosis in yeast, and DSB formation is dependent on the meiotic recombination machinery. The rate of meiotic instability is several fold higher than mitotic instability. To determine whether DSB repair is responsible for the high rate of repeat tract-length alterations, the frequencies of meiotic repeat-tract instability were compared in wild-type and spo11 mutant strains. In the spo11 background, the rate of meiotic repeat-tract instability remained at the mitotic level, suggesting that meiotic alterations of CAG repeat tracts in yeast occur by the recombination mechanism. Several of these meiotic tract-length alterations are due to DSB repair involving use of the sister chromatid as a template.  相似文献   

14.
Hashem VI  Sinden RR 《Mutation research》2002,508(1-2):107-119
The number of neurodegenerative disorders associated with the expansion of DNA repeats, currently about 18, continues to increase as additional diseases caused by this novel type of mutation are identified. Typically, expanded repeats are biased toward further expansion upon intergenerational transmission, and disease symptoms show an earlier age of onset and greater severity as the length of the triplet repeat tract increases. Most diseases exhibit progressive neurological and/or muscular degeneration that can lead to total disability and death. As yet, no treatment exists for the genetic basis of any repeat disease. Given that the severity of these diseases is related to repeat tract length, reducing repeat lengths might delay the onset and reduce disease severity. Here, we test the hypothesis that the introduction of damage into DNA, which results in subsequent repair events, can lead to an increased rate of repeat deletion. Applying a sensitive genetic assay in Escherichia coli [Mut. Res. 502 (2002) 25], we demonstrate that certain DNA damaging agents, including EMS, ENU, UV light, and anticancer agents mitomycin C, cisplatin, and X-rays increase the rate of deletion of (CTG).(CAG) repeats in a length and orientation dependent fashion. In addition, oxidative damage to DNA also increases the deletion rate of repeats. These results suggest that a chemotherapeutic approach to the reduction in triplet repeat length may provide one possible rationale to slow, stop, or reverse the progression of these diseases.  相似文献   

15.
The human genome is under continuous attack by a plethora of harmful agents. Without the development of several dedicated DNA repair pathways, the genome would have been destroyed and cell death, inevitable. However, while DNA repair enzymes generally maintain the integrity of the whole genome by properly repairing mutagenic and cytotoxic intermediates, there are cases in which the DNA repair machinery is implicated in causing disease rather than protecting against it. One case is the instability of gene-specific trinucleotides, the causative mutations of numerous disorders including Huntington’s disease. The DNA repair proteins induce mutations that are different from the genome-wide mutations that arise in the absence of repair enzymes; they occur at definite loci, they occur in specific tissues during development, and they are age-dependent. These latter characteristics make pluripotent stem cells a suitable model system for triplet repeat expansion disorders. Pluripotent stem cells can be kept in culture for a prolonged period of time and can easily be differentiated into any tissue, e.g., cells along the neural lineage. Here, we review the role of DNA repair proteins in the process of triplet repeat instability in Huntington’s disease and also the potential use of pluripotent stem cells to investigate neurodegenerative disorders.  相似文献   

16.
The expansion of trinucleotide repeat (TNR) sequences in human DNA is considered to be a key factor in the pathogenesis of more than 40 neurodegenerative diseases. TNR expansion occurs during DNA replication and also, as suggested by recent studies, during the repair of DNA lesions produced by oxidative stress. In particular, the oxidized guanine base 8-oxoguanine within sequences containing CAG repeats may induce formation of pro-expansion intermediates through strand slippage during DNA base excision repair (BER). In this article, we describe how oxidized DNA lesions are repaired by BER and discuss the importance of the coordinated activities of the key repair enzymes, such as DNA polymerase β, flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1) and DNA ligase, in preventing strand slippage and TNR expansion.  相似文献   

17.
Structural basis for triplet repeat disorders: a computational analysis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
MOTIVATION: Over a dozen major degenerative disorders, including myotonic distrophy, Huntington's disease and fragile X syndrome, result from unstable expansions of particular trinucleotides. Remarkably, only some of all the possible triplets, namely CAG/CTG, CGG/CCG and GAA/TTC, have been associated with the known pathological expansions. This raises some basic questions at the DNA level. Why do particular triplets seem to be singled out? What is the mechanism for their expansion and how does it depend on the triplet itself? Could other triplets or longer repeats be involved in other diseases? RESULTS: Using several different computational models of DNA structure, we show that the triplets involved in the pathological repeats generally fall into extreme classes. Thus, CAG/CTG repeats are particularly flexible, whereas GCC, CGG and GAA repeats appear to display both flexible and rigid (but curved) characteristics depending on the method of analysis. The fact that (1) trinucleotide repeats often become increasingly unstable when they exceed a length of approximately 50 repeats, and (2) repeated 12-mers display a similar increase in instability above 13 repeats, together suggest that approximately 150 bp is a general threshold length for repeat instability. Since this is about the length of DNA wrapped up in a single nucleosome core particle, we speculate that chromatin structure may play an important role in the expansion mechanism. We furthermore suggest that expansion of a dodecamer repeat, which we predict to have very high flexibility, may play a role in the pathogenesis of the neurodegenerative disorder multiple system atrophy (MSA). CONTACT: pfbaldi@ics.uci.edu, yves@netid.com, brunak@cbs.dtu.dk, gorm@cbs.dtu.dk.  相似文献   

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Mammalian prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders dependent on the prion protein PrP. Expansion of the oligopeptide repeats (ORE) found in PrP is associated with inherited prion diseases. Patients with ORE frequently harbor PrP aggregates, but other factors may contribute to pathology, as they often present with unexplained phenotypic variability. We created chimeric yeast-mammalian prion proteins to examine the influence of the PrP ORE on prion properties in yeast. Remarkably, all chimeric proteins maintained prion characteristics. The largest repeat expansion chimera displayed a higher propensity to maintain a self-propagating aggregated state. Strikingly, the repeat expansion conferred increased conformational flexibility, as observed by enhanced phenotypic variation. Furthermore, the repeat expansion chimera displayed an increased rate of prion conversion, but only in the presence of another aggregate, the [RNQ+] prion. We suggest that the PrP ORE increases the conformational flexibility of the prion protein, thereby enhancing the formation of multiple distinct aggregate structures and allowing more frequent prion conversion. Both of these characteristics may contribute to the phenotypic variability associated with PrP repeat expansion diseases.  相似文献   

20.
Trinucleotide repeats (TNRs) undergo frequent mutations in families afflicted with certain neurodegenerative disorders and in model organisms. TNR instability is modulated both by the repeat tract itself and by cellular proteins. Here we identified the Saccharomyces cerevisiae DNA helicase Srs2 as a potent and selective inhibitor of expansions. srs2 mutants had up to 40-fold increased expansion rates of CTG, CAG, and CGG repeats. The expansion phenotype was specific, as mutation rates at dinucleotide repeats, at unique sequences, or for TNR contractions in srs2 mutants were not altered. Srs2 is known to suppress inappropriate genetic recombination; however, the TNR expansion phenotype of srs2 mutants was largely independent of RAD51 and RAD52. Instead, Srs2 mainly functioned with DNA polymerase delta to block expansions. The helicase activity of Srs2 was important, because a point mutant lacking ATPase function was defective in blocking expansions. Purified Srs2 was substantially better than bacterial UvrD helicase at in vitro unwinding of a DNA substrate that mimicked a TNR hairpin. Disruption of the related helicase gene SGS1 did not lead to excess expansions, nor did wild-type SGS1 suppress the expansion phenotype of an srs2 strain. We conclude that Srs2 selectively blocks triplet repeat expansions through its helicase activity and primarily in conjunction with polymerase delta.  相似文献   

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