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1.
XRCC1 and DNA strand break repair   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Caldecott KW 《DNA Repair》2003,2(9):955-969
DNA single-strand breaks can arise indirectly, as normal intermediates of DNA base excision repair, or directly from damage to deoxyribose. Because single-strand breaks are induced by endogenous reactive molecules such as reactive oxygen species, these lesions pose a continuous threat to genetic integrity. XRCC1 protein plays a major role in facilitating the repair of single-strand breaks in mammalian cells, via an ability to interact with multiple enzymatic components of repair reactions. Here, the protein-protein interactions facilitated by XRCC1, and the repair processes in which these interactions operate, are reviewed. Models for the repair of single-strand breaks during base excision repair and at direct breaks are presented.  相似文献   

2.
The co-genotoxic effects of cadmium are well recognized and it is assumed that most of these effects are due to the inhibition of DNA repair. We used the comet assay to analyze the effect of low, non-toxic concentrations of CdCl2 on DNA damage and repair-induced in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells by UV-radiation, by methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) and by N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU). The UV-induced DNA lesions revealed by the comet assay are single-strand breaks which are the intermediates formed during nucleotide excision repair (NER). In cells exposed to UV-irradiation alone the formation of DNA strand breaks was rapid, followed by a fast rejoining phase during the first 60 min after irradiation. In UV-irradiated cells pre-exposed to CdCl2, the formation of DNA strand breaks was significantly slower, indicating that cadmium inhibited DNA damage recognition and/or excision. Methyl methanesulfonate and N-methyl-N-nitrosourea directly alkylate nitrogen and oxygen atoms of DNA bases. The lesions revealed by the comet assay are mainly breaks at apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites and breaks formed as intermediates during base excision repair (BER). In MMS treated cells the initial level of DNA strand breaks did not change during the first hour of recovery; thereafter repair was detected. In cells pre-exposed to CdCl2 the MMS-induced DNA strand breaks accumulated during the first 2h of recovery, indicating that AP sites and/or DNA strand breaks were formed but that further steps of BER were blocked. In MNU treated cells the maximal level of DNA strand breaks was detected immediately after the treatment and the breaks were repaired rapidly. In CdCl2 pre-treated cells the formation of MNU-induced DNA single-strand breaks was not affected, while the repair was slower, indicating inhibition of polymerization and/or the ligation step of BER. Cadmium thus affects the repair of UV-, MMS- and MNU-induced DNA damage, providing further evidence, that inhibition of DNA repair is an important mechanism of cadmium induced mutagenicity and carcinogenicity.  相似文献   

3.
P Hentosh 《Radiation research》1988,115(3):436-447
The effects of oxygen and misonidazole on the induction of DNA lesions were examined in human TK6 lymphoblasts irradiated with 60Co gamma rays. We have investigated both the formation and subsequent repair of two classes of DNA damage, single-strand breaks and lesions recognized by the gamma endonuclease activity in a cell-free extract of Micrococcus luteus. Relative to irradiation under hypoxia, single-strand break yields were increased by the presence of either oxygen or misonidazole at the time of irradiation. In contrast, M. luteus enzyme-sensitive site yields were unaffected by the presence of either oxygen or misonidazole. No significant differences in single-strand break or enzyme-sensitive site repair kinetics were observed for lesions induced under any of the irradiation conditions employed. These results confirm the sensitizing effects of oxygen and oxygen-mimetic drugs on the induction of single-strand breaks but provide no support for their ability to enhance the induction of enzyme-sensitive sites.  相似文献   

4.
The repair kinetics for rejoining of DNA single- and double-strand breaks after exposure to UVC or gamma radiation was measured in cells with deficiencies in DNA ligase activities and in their normal counterparts. Human 46BR cells were deficient in DNA ligase I. Hamster EM9 and EM-C11 cells were deficient in DNA ligase III activity as a consequence of mutations in the XRCC1 gene. Hamster XR-1 cells had mutation in the XRCC4 gene, whose product stimulates DNA ligase IV activity. DNA single- and double-strand breaks were assessed by the comet assay in alkaline conditions and by the technique of graded-field gel electrophoresis in neutral conditions, respectively. 46BR cells, which are known to re-ligate at a reduced rate the DNA single-strand breaks incurred during processing of damage induced by UVC but not gamma radiation, were shown to have a normal repair of radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks. EM9 cells exhibited a reduced rate of rejoining of DNA single-strand breaks after exposure to ionizing radiation, as reported previously, as well as UVC radiation. EM-C11 cells were deficient in the repair of radiation-induced-DNA single-strand breaks but, in contrast to EM9 cells, demonstrated the same kinetics as the parental cell line in the resealing of DNA breaks resulting from exposure to UVC radiation. Both EM9 and EM-C11 cells displayed a significant defect in rejoining of radiation-induced-DNA double-strand breaks. XR-1 cells were confirmed to be highly deficient in the repair of radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks but appeared to rejoin DNA single-strand breaks after UVC and gamma irradiation at rates close to normal. Taken together these results indicate that: (1) DNA ligase I is involved only in nucleotide excision repair; (2) DNA ligase IV plays an important role only in repair of DNA double-strand breaks; and (3) DNA ligase III is implicated in base excision repair and in repair of DNA double-strand breaks, but probably not in nucleotide excision repair.  相似文献   

5.
Microscopy and micro-irradiation imaging techniques have significantly advanced our knowledge of DNA damage tolerance and the assembly of DNA repair proteins at the sites of damage. While these tools have been extensively applied to the study of nucleotide excision repair and double-strand break repair, their application to the repair of oxidatively-induced base lesions and single-strand breaks is just beginning to yield new insights. This review will focus on examining micro-irradiation techniques reported to create base lesions and single-strand breaks; these lesions are considered to be primarily addressed by proteins involved in the base excision repair (BER) pathway. By examining conditions for generating these DNA lesions and reviewing information on the assembly and dissociation of repair complexes at the induced lesion sites, we hope to promote further investigations into BER and to stimulate further development and enhancement of these techniques for the study of BER.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Some aspects of DNA repair in several radiation-resistant and radiation-sensitive strains of Dictyostelium discoideum were investigated by using alkaline sucrose gradients to analyze for the production and resealing of single-strand breaks following irradiation with 254 nm UV. All radiation-resistant strains and all mutants assayed that are sensitive to both UV and 60Co gamma rays produced singlestrand breaks in their nuclear DNA after a UV fluence of 15 J/m2. Mutants at the radC locus which are sensitive to UV but as resistant as their parental strains to 60Co gamma rays produced many fewer single-strand breaks in their DNA after irradiation with UV. Thus, the radC mutations alter a repair pathway specific for UV-induced DNA damage and presumably affect the activity of a UV-damage-specific endonuclease involved in excision repair. All radiation-resistant strains and all of our mutants sensitive to gamma rays rejoined much of their DNA during a three-hour post-UV-irradiation incubation, suggesting that these strains have at least a partially intact excision repair system.Abbreviations used UV ultraviolet light - PBS phosphate buffered saline - cpm counts per minute  相似文献   

7.
Ionising radiation produces clustered DNA damage. Recent studies have established that the efficiency of excision of a lesion within clustered damage sites is reduced. This study presents evidence that the repair of clustered DNA damage is compromised, relative to that of the isolated lesions, since the lifetime of both lesions is extended by up to eight fold. Simple clustered damage sites, comprised of a single-strand break, one or five bases 3' or 5' to 8-oxoG on the opposite strand, were synthesised in oligonucleotides and repair carried out in XRS5 nuclear extracts. The rate of repair of the single-strand break within these clustered damage sites is reduced, mainly due to inhibition of the DNA ligase III/XRCC1 complex. The single-strand break, present as an isolated lesion, is repaired by short-patch base excision repair, however the mechanism of repair of the single-strand break within the clustered damage site is asymmetric. When the lesions are 5' to each other, the single-strand break is rejoined by short-patch repair whereas the rejoining of the single-strand break occurs by long-patch type repair when the lesions are 3' to one another. The retardation of DNA ligase III/XRCC1 complex, following addition of one base, is responsible for the initiation of long-patch base excision repair when the lesions are 3' to each other. The lesions within the cluster are processed sequentially, the single-strand break being repaired before excision of 8-oxoG, limiting the formation of double-strand breaks to <2%. Stalled processing of clustered DNA damage is suggested to have implications for mutation induction by radiation.  相似文献   

8.
Mammalian DNA single-strand break repair: an X-ra(y)ted affair   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The genetic stability of living cells is continuously threatened by the presence of endogenous reactive oxygen species and other genotoxic molecules. Of particular threat are the thousands of DNA single-strand breaks that arise in each cell, each day, both directly from disintegration of damaged sugars and indirectly from the excision repair of damaged bases. If un-repaired, single-strand breaks can be converted into double-strand breaks during DNA replication, potentially resulting in chromosomal rearrangement and genetic deletion. Consequently, cells have adopted multiple pathways to ensure the rapid and efficient removal of single-strand breaks. A general feature of these pathways appears to be the extensive employment of protein-protein interactions to stimulate both the individual component steps and the overall repair reaction. Our current understanding of DNA single-strand break repair is discussed, and testable models for the architectural coordination of this important process are presented.  相似文献   

9.
In addition to double- and single-strand DNA breaks and isolated base modifications, ionizing radiation induces clustered DNA damage, which contains two or more lesions closely spaced within about two helical turns on opposite DNA strands. Post-irradiation repair of single-base lesions is routinely performed by base excision repair and a DNA strand break is involved as an intermediate. Simultaneous processing of lesions on opposite DNA strands may generate double-strand DNA breaks and enhance nonhomologous end joining, which frequently results in the formation of deletions. Recent studies support the possibility that the mechanism of base excision repair contributes to genome stability by diminishing the formation of double-strand DNA breaks during processing of clustered lesions.  相似文献   

10.
Skin fibroblasts from Gardner syndrome (GS) compared with those from normal donors showed a significantly higher incidence of chromatid gaps and breaks following exposure to low-intensity, cool-white fluorescent light during G2 phase of the cell cycle. Considerable evidence supports the concept that chromatid gaps and breaks seen directly after exposure to DNA-damaging agents represent unrepaired DNA single- and double-strand breaks respectively. The changes in incidence of chromatid aberrations with time after light exposure are consistent with the sequence of events known to follow DNA damage and repair. Initially, the incidence of light-induced chromatid gaps was equivalent in GS and normal fibroblasts. In the normal cells, the chromatid gaps disappeared by 1 h post-exposure, presumably as a result of efficient repair of DNA single-strand breaks. In contrast, the incidence of gaps increased in GS cells by 0.5 h followed by a decrease at 1 h and concomitant increase in chromatid breaks. It appears from these findings that the increased incidence of chromatid damage in GS fibroblasts results from deficient repair of DNA single-strand breaks which arise from incomplete nucleotide excision of DNA damage during G2 phase.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics of UV- (254 nm) irradiation-induced DNA single-strand breaks (SSBs), generated during the excision repair of UV-induced DNA damage, in leukemic lymphocytes and in normal blood mononuclear cells (MNCs) were studied using the alkaline comet assay. The cells were isolated by density gradient centrifugation from peripheral blood of patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and from healthy study subjects. The cytotoxicity of UV irradiation was determined in vitro in peripheral blood mononuclear lymphocytes from 36 CLL patients and from eight healthy donors using the incorporation of radioactive leucine in 4-day cultures. A remarkable difference in excision repair capability was observed between normal and leukemic lymphocytes. In contrast to normal lymphocytes, there was always a subpopulation of CLL cells that did not complete the repair of UV-induced DNA damage during the 24-h repair period. Furthermore, differences were also recorded between UV-sensitive and UV-resistant CLL cases. The differences in DNA migration between the maximum increase (59-77 microm) and that at 24 h after irradiation (21-66 microm) was statistically significant in two of three patients exhibiting UV-resistance. Correspondingly, only in one of three patients exhibiting UV-sensitivity was the difference in DNA migration statistically significant (maximum increase: 44-107 microm, vs. 24 h after: 42-100 microm). Our results confirm an abnormal pattern of the CLL cell response to UV irradiation. Furthermore, we identified defective processing of UV-induced DNA damage in CLL versus normal lymphocytes, particularly in UV-sensitive cases.  相似文献   

12.
Mutants of Drosophila melanogaster that are sensitive to chemical mutagens were analyzed for sensitivity to X-rays and for the capacity to repair single-strand DNA breaks induced by X-rays. Analysis of X-ray sensitivity demonstrated that 74% of the mutants assayed display some X-ray sensitivity, with 75% of the sensitive lines being extremely sensitive. Repair of single-strand breaks was assayed after both high and low doses of irradiation in order to permit detection of repair over a wide range of damage. The results of this investigation fail to show a correlation between X-ray sensitivity and this particular repair process. Repair of single-strand breaks is therefore mediated by repair processes unrelated to those that are disrupted in the current mutant collection.  相似文献   

13.
It has been suggested that genomic alterations involving DNA damage and the ability to repair such damage play an important role in cellular senescence. In this study, endogenous DNA single-strand breaks, the susceptibility of DNA to induced strand breakage and the capacity to repair these breaks were compared in postmitotic cells from young (3-day-old) and old (23-day-old) houseflies. DNA single-strand breaks did not accumulate during normal aging in the housefly. However, cells of the old flies exhibited a greater sensitivity to single-strand breakage induced by gamma-radiation and UV light. The capacity to repair these exogenously induced single-strand breaks declined with age. Results do not support the view that DNA single-strand breaks are a causal factor in aging in the housefly. An age-related increase in the susceptibility to undergo single-strand breakage suggests alterations in chromatin during the aging process.  相似文献   

14.
Irradiation of mammalian cells with solar light is associated with the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidative stress, which is mediated in part by endogenous photosensitizers absorbing in the visible range of the solar spectrum. Accordingly, oxidative DNA base modifications such as 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) are the predominant types of DNA damage in cells irradiated at wavelengths >400 nm. We have analysed the repair of oxidative purine modifications in human skin fibroblasts and melanoma cells using an alkaline elution technique, both under normal conditions and after depletion of glutathione. Similar repair rates were observed in fibroblasts and melanoma cells from three different patients (t1/2 approximately 4h). In both cell types, glutathione depletion (increased oxidative stress) caused a pronounced repair retardation even under non-toxic irradiation conditions. Furthermore, the cleavage activity at 8-oxoG residues measured in protein extracts of the cells dropped transiently after irradiation. An addition of dithiothreitol restored normal repair rates. Interestingly, the repair rates of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (t1/2 approximately 18 h), AP sites (t1/2 approximately 1h) and single-strand breaks (t1/2 <30 min) were not affected by the light-induced oxidative stress. We conclude that the base excision repair of oxidative purine modifications is surprisingly vulnerable to oxidative stress, while the nucleotide excision repair of pyrimidine dimers is not.  相似文献   

15.
The hypothesis that after irradiation a competition exists between fixation of radiation damage and its repair and that this competition determines cell survival was to be tested. Postirradiation temperature of holding was employed as a means of modulating rate of damage repair, and the postirradiation rates of repair of DNA strand breaks (both single and double) were monitored using elution assays. At temperatures below 37 degrees C following irradiation the rates of rejoining were decreased markedly, although rejoining of single-strand breaks was seen even at 10 degrees C and rejoining of double-strand breaks still occurred at 16 degrees C. However, 3 h incubation of cells at these lowered temperatures had no observable effect on cell survival parameters. It is concluded that either damage fixation and damage repair have the same dependence on temperature, or simple measurements of rejoining of breaks are insufficient to detect the details of the competition between repair and fixation (some measure of fidelity of repair is needed).  相似文献   

16.
Double-strand DNA breaks are the most lethal type of DNA damage induced by ionizing radiations. Previously, we reported that double-strand DNA breaks can be enzymatically produced from two DNA damages located on opposite DNA strands 18 or 30 base pairs apart in a cell-free double-strand DNA break formation assay (Vispé, S., and Satoh, M. S. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 27386-27392). In the assay that we developed, these two DNA damages are converted into single-strand interruptions by enzymes involved in base excision repair. We showed that these single-strand interruptions are converted into double-strand DNA breaks; however, it was not due to spontaneous denaturation of DNA. Thus, we proposed a model in which DNA polymerase delta/epsilon, by producing repair patches at single-strand interruptions, collide, resulting in double-strand DNA break formation. We tested the model and investigated whether other enzymes/factors are involved in double-strand DNA break formation. Here we report that, instead of DNA polymerase delta/epsilon, flap endonuclease-1 (FEN-1), an enzyme involved in base excision repair, is responsible for the formation of double-strand DNA break in the assay. Furthermore, by transfecting a flap endonuclease-1 expression construct into cells, thus altering their flap endonuclease-1 content, we found an increased number of double-strand DNA breaks after gamma-ray irradiation of these cells. These results suggest that flap endonuclease-1 acts as a double-strand DNA break formation factor. Because FEN-1 is an essential enzyme that plays its roles in DNA repair and DNA replication, DSBs may be produced in cells as by-products of the activity of FEN-1.  相似文献   

17.
We used the bromouracil-photolysis technique to estimate the sizes of the repaired regions in normal human and xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) cells irradiated by gamma-rays aerobically or anoxically. After 1 1/2 hours of incubation, single-strand breaks were repaired and the repaired regions were small--one to two BrUra residues--for cells irradiated aerobically or anoxically. After a 20-hour incubation, the repaired region in normal cells showed a component mimicking U.V.-repair. There were large patches (approximately 30 BrUra residues) in the approximate ratios of one per six chain breaks for aerobic irradiation and one per three chain breaks for anoxic irradiation. XP cells, however, only showed large patches at 20 hours if they had been irradiated aerobically. We could not detect such regions in XP cells irradiated anoxically. These results indicate (1) that some part of ionizing damage mimics excision of U.V. damage in that the repair patches are large and the repair takes an appreciable time; (2) the types of such damage depend on whether the irradiation is done aerobically or anoxically; and (3) XP cells are defective in repairing a component of anoxic damage.  相似文献   

18.
To characterize proteins that interact with base excision/single-strand interruption repair DNA intermediates in cell free extracts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we used a combination of photoaffinity labeling with the protein identification by MALDI-TOF-MS peptide mapping. Photoreactive analogue of dCTP, namely exo-N-[4-(4-azido-2,3,5,6,-tetrafluorobenzylidenehydrazinocarbonyl)-butylcarbamoyl]-2'-deoxycytidine-5'-triphosphate, and [(32)P]-labeled DNA duplex containing one nucleotide gap were used to generate nick-containing DNA with a photoreactive dCMP residue at the 3'-margin of the nick. This photoreactive DNA derivative was incubated with the yeast cell extract and after UV irradiation a number of proteins were labeled. Two of the crosslinked proteins were identified as the catalytic subunit of DNA polymerase ? and Ddc1 checkpoint protein. Labeling of DNA polymerase ? catalytic subunit with the nick-containing DNA repair intermediate indicates that the DNA polymerase is involved in the DNA repair synthesis in yeast, at least at DNA single-strand interruptions. Crosslinking of Ddc1 to DNA nicks took place independently of the other components of checkpoint clamp, Mec3 and Rad17, suggesting that the protein alone is able to recognize DNA single-strand breaks. Indeed, purified GST-tagged Ddc1 protein was efficiently crosslinked to nick-containing DNA. The interaction of Ddc1 with DNA nicks may provide a link between the DNA damage checkpoint and DNA base excision/single-strand breaks repair pathways in yeast. In addition, we found that absence of Ddc1 protein greatly influences the overall pattern of other proteins crosslinked to DNA nick. We suggested that this last effect of Ddc1 is at least partially due to its capacity to prevent proteolytic degradation of the DNA-protein adducts.  相似文献   

19.
In this investigation, normal and Fanconi's anemia fibroblasts were exposed to high concentrations of oxygen and the effects of this treatment on DNA were analyzed by alkaline elution. No DNA single-strand breaks were detected in either cell type with up to 20 h incubation in high (50–95%) concentrations of O2. No evidence of DNA damage by O2 could be detected with an endonuclease preparation from Micrococcus luteus. Cells which have been treated with various DNA-damaging agents in the presence of the polymerase inhibitor cytosine arabinoside have been shown to accumulate DNA single-strand breaks during DNA excision repair. When cells were treated with the polymerase inhibitor in 50 or 95% O2, a low level of DNA single-strand breaks accumulated in both cell types. However, no significant differences in the frequency of DNA single-strand breaks were detected between normal and Fanconi's anemia cells after exposure to high O2.  相似文献   

20.
The relationship between molecular and cellular repair from potentially lethal damage (PLD) induced by N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) was investigated in exponentially growing V79 Chinese hamster cells. We compared the repair processes by an alkaline sucrose sedimentation analysis and a colony formation assay. MNNG-treated cells were exposed to the conditioned medium (CM) from density-inhibited plateau-phase V79 cell cultures, as a post-treatment for the induction of PLD repair. When MNNG-treated cells were postincubated in CM, cell survival continuously increased for 18 h, and during this period, DNA replication was substantially suppressed. CM did not inhibit the rejoining of the single-strand breaks of parental DNA. Rather, parental DNA fragments sedimented more rapidly when postincubated in CM than in fresh medium. These data indicate that cellular recovery from MNNG-induced PLD increases in proportion to the resealing of MNNG-induced single-strand breaks of DNA during the suppression of DNA replication, suggesting that excision repair is involved in the PLD repair process.  相似文献   

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