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1.
Endonuclease VIII (Nei) from Escherichia coli is a DNA repair enzyme that removes a wide range of oxidized pyrimidine bases from DNA. As inferred from the crystal structures and biochemical studies, recognition of DNA lesions by Nei involves several conformational changes in both protein and DNA, such as DNA kinking, damaged base eversion into the enzyme's active site, and insertion of a loop of the enzyme into the void formed by the eversion. Excision of the damaged base by Nei also proceeds through several chemical steps: N-glycosidic bond breakage, β-elimination and δ-elimination of the phosphates flanking the lesion. We have used stopped-flow kinetics with fluorescence detection to follow conformational changes in the Nei molecule when the enzyme binds normal DNA, damaged but uncleavable DNA, or several cleavable damaged DNA substrates. Binding normal or damaged uncleavable DNA proceeded in two fluorescently discernible reversible stages, while processing of cleavable substrates involved three reversible stages followed by and irreversible stage and equilibrium with the reaction product. Individual rate constants were calculated for each reaction step. Based on the stopped-flow data, crystal structure, and a comparison with the stopped-flow kinetics of E. coli formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase, a homolog of Nei, we propose the nature of some of the steps that may be involved into the recognition and excision of damaged bases by Nei.  相似文献   

2.

Background

DNA glycosylases remove the modified, damaged or mismatched bases from the DNA by hydrolyzing the N-glycosidic bonds. Some enzymes can further catalyze the incision of a resulting abasic (apurinic/apyrimidinic, AP) site through β- or β,δ-elimination mechanisms. In most cases, the incision reaction of the AP-site is catalyzed by special enzymes called AP-endonucleases.

Methods

Here, we report the kinetic analysis of the mechanisms of modified DNA transfer from some DNA glycosylases to the AP endonuclease, APE1. The modified DNA contained the tetrahydrofurane residue (F), the analogue of the AP-site. DNA glycosylases AAG, OGG1, NEIL1, MBD4cat and UNG from different structural superfamilies were used.

Results

We found that all DNA glycosylases may utilise direct protein–protein interactions in the transient ternary complex for the transfer of the AP-containing DNA strand to APE1.

Conclusions

We hypothesize a fast “flip-flop” exchange mechanism of damaged and undamaged DNA strands within this complex for monofunctional DNA glycosylases like MBD4cat, AAG and UNG. Bifunctional DNA glycosylase NEIL1 creates tightly specific complex with DNA containing F-site thereby efficiently competing with APE1. Whereas APE1 fast displaces other bifunctional DNA glycosylase OGG1 on F-site thereby induces its shifts to undamaged DNA regions.

General significance

Kinetic analysis of the transfer of DNA between human DNA glycosylases and APE1 allows us to elucidate the critical step in the base excision repair pathway.  相似文献   

3.
The highly mutagenic A:oxoG (8-oxoguanine) base pair in DNA most frequently arises by aberrant replication of the primary oxidative lesion C:oxoG. This lesion is particularly insidious because neither of its constituent nucleobases faithfully transmit genetic information from the original C:G base pair. Repair of A:oxoG is initiated by adenine DNA glycosylase, which catalyzes hydrolytic cleavage of the aberrant A nucleobase from the DNA backbone. These enzymes, MutY in bacteria and MUTYH in humans, scrupulously avoid processing of C:oxoG because cleavage of the C residue in C:oxoG would actually promote mutagenic conversion to A:oxoG. Here we analyze the structural basis for rejection of C:oxoG by MutY, using a synthetic crystallography approach to capture the enzyme in the process of inspecting the C:oxoG anti-substrate, with which it ordinarily binds only fleetingly. We find that MutY uses two distinct strategies to avoid presentation of C to the enzyme active site. Firstly, MutY possesses an exo-site that serves as a decoy for C, and secondly, repulsive forces with a key active site residue prevent stable insertion of C into the nucleobase recognition pocket within the enzyme active site.  相似文献   

4.
CpG dinucleotides are targets for epigenetic methylation, many of them bearing 5-methylcytosine (mCyt) in the human genome. Guanine in this context can be easily oxidized to 8-oxoguanine (oxoGua), which is repaired by 8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase (OGG1). We have studied how methylation affects the efficiency of oxoGua excision from damaged CpG dinucleotides. Methylation of the adjacent cytosine moderately decreased the oxoGua excision rate while methylation opposite oxoGua lowered the rate of product release. Cytosine methylation abolished stimulation of OGG1 by repair endonuclease APEX1. The OGG1 S326C polymorphic variant associated with lung cancer showed poorer base excision and lost sensitivity to the opposite-base methylation. The overall repair in the system reconstituted from purified proteins decreased for CpG with mCyt in the damaged strand.  相似文献   

5.
Repair of the ubiquitous mutagenic lesion 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) is initiated in eukaryotes by DNA glycosylases/lyases, such as yeast Ogg1, that do not share significant sequence identity with their prokaryotic counterparts, typified by Escherichia coli MutM (Fpg) protein. The unexpected presence of a functional mutM orthologue in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana has brought into question the existence of functional OGG1 orthologues in plants. We report here the cDNA cloning, expression and functional characterization of AtOGG1, an Arabidopsis thaliana gene widely expressed in different plant tissues which encodes a 40.3 kDa protein with significant sequence identity to yeast and human Ogg1 proteins. Purified AtOgg1 enzyme specifically cleaves duplex DNA containing an 8-OxoG:C mispair, and the repair reaction proceeds through an imine intermediate characteristic of all bifunctional DNA glycosylases/lyases. Consistent with its in vitro activity, expression of AtOGG1 suppresses the mutator phenotype of an E. coli strain deficient in 8-oxoG repair. Our results suggest that AtOgg1 is an structural and functional homologue of Ogg1 and establish the presence of two distinct 8-oxoG repair enzymes in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Clustered DNA damage, where two or more lesions are located proximal to each other on the same or opposite DNA strands, is frequently produced as a result of exposure to ionising radiation. It has been suggested that such complex damaged sites pose problems for repair pathways. In this study, we addressed the question of how two 8-oxoguanine lesions, located two nucleotides apart on the same DNA strand, are repaired. We find that in human cell extracts repair of either of the 8-oxoguanine lesions within a tandem damaged site is initiated randomly and that the majority of the initiated repair proceeds to completion. However, a fraction of the initiated repair is delayed at the stage of an incised AP site and the rate of further processing of this incised AP site is dependent on the position of the remaining 8-oxoguanine. If the remaining 8-oxoguanine residue is located near the 5' terminus of the incised abasic site, repair continues as efficiently as repair of a single 8-oxoguanine residue. However, repair is delayed after the incision step when the remaining 8-oxoguanine residue is located near the 3' terminus. Although the presence of the 8-oxoguanine residue near the 3' terminus did not affect either DNA polymerase beta activity or poly(ADP)ribose polymerase-1 affinity and turnover on an incised AP site, we find that 8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase has reduced ability to remove an 8-oxoguanine residue located near the 3' terminus of the incised AP site. We find that binding of the 8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase to this 8-oxoguanine residue inhibits DNA repair synthesis by DNA polymerase beta, thus delaying repair. We propose that interference between a DNA glycosylase and DNA polymerase during the repair of tandem lesions may lead to accumulation of the intermediate products that contain persisting DNA strand breaks.  相似文献   

8.
Endogenous DNA damage induced by hydrolysis, reactive oxygen species and alkylation modifies DNA bases and the structure of the DNA duplex. Numerous mechanisms have evolved to protect cells from these deleterious effects. Base excision repair is the major pathway for removing base lesions. However, several mechanisms of direct base damage reversal, involving enzymes such as transferases, photolyases and oxidative demethylases, are specialized to remove certain types of photoproducts and alkylated bases. Mismatch excision repair corrects for misincorporation of bases by replicative DNA polymerases. The determination of the 3D structure and visualization of DNA repair proteins and their interactions with damaged DNA have considerably aided our understanding of the molecular basis for DNA base lesion repair and genome stability. Here, we review the structural biochemistry of base lesion recognition and initiation of one-step direct reversal (DR) of damage as well as the multistep pathways of base excision repair (BER), nucleotide incision repair (NIR) and mismatch repair (MMR).  相似文献   

9.
DNA glycosylases preserve genome integrity and define the specificity of the base excision repair pathway for discreet, detrimental modifications, and thus, the mechanisms by which glycosylases locate DNA damage are of particular interest. Bacterial AlkC and AlkD are specific for cationic alkylated nucleobases and have a distinctive HEAT‐like repeat (HLR) fold. AlkD uses a unique non‐base‐flipping mechanism that enables excision of bulky lesions more commonly associated with nucleotide excision repair. In contrast, AlkC has a much narrower specificity for small lesions, principally N3‐methyladenine (3mA). Here, we describe how AlkC selects for and excises 3mA using a non‐base‐flipping strategy distinct from that of AlkD. A crystal structure resembling a catalytic intermediate complex shows how AlkC uses unique HLR and immunoglobulin‐like domains to induce a sharp kink in the DNA, exposing the damaged nucleobase to active site residues that project into the DNA. This active site can accommodate and excise N3‐methylcytosine (3mC) and N1‐methyladenine (1mA), which are also repaired by AlkB‐catalyzed oxidative demethylation, providing a potential alternative mechanism for repair of these lesions in bacteria.  相似文献   

10.
Roles of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in damage to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) following ultraviolet (UV)-irradiation were investigated in the human hepatoma cell line SK-HEP-1. We altered the intracellular status of ROS by the overexpression of manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) and/or catalase. Using HPLC, we analyzed 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodGuo), known as a marker of damage to DNA molecules. UV-irradiation resulted in the accumulation of 8-oxodGuo in these cells. The overexpression of MnSOD enhanced the accumulation of 8-oxodGuo by UV. The co-overexpression of catalase inhibited the accumulation of 8-oxodGuo by UV in MnSOD-transfectants. The overexpression of MnSOD reduced the colony forming capacity in SK-HEP-1 cells and the co-overexpression of catalase with MnSOD stimulated the capacity compared to control. UV-irradiation inhibited the colony forming capacity in these cells; no difference was observed among the capacities of control, MnSOD- and catalase-transfectants. However, the overexpression of MnSOD/catalase significantly rescued the reduction of colony forming capacity by UV-irradiation. Our results suggest that the accumulation of hydrogen peroxide plays a key role in the oxidative damage to mtDNA of UV-irradiated cells, and also that the overexpression of both MnSOD and catalase reduces the mtDNA damage and blocks the growth inhibition by UV. Our results also indicate that the increased activity of MnSOD may lead to a toxic effect on mtDNA by UV-irradiation.  相似文献   

11.
Reactive oxygen species are considered to play a role in the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and its complications. 8-Oxoguanine, which is one of the major oxidation base lesions produced by reactive oxygen species, may cause G:C to T:A transversion mutations because it can mispair with adenine. hMTH1 (human mutT homolog 1), hOGG1 (human 8-oxoguanine glycosylase 1) and MUTYH (human mutY homolog) genes constitute the 8-oxoG repair pathway. In this study, we screened for the polymorphism variants Val83Met (c.247G>A, rs4866) in hMTH1; c.-53G>C (rs56387615), c.-23A>G (rs1801129) and c.-18G>T (rs1801126) in the 5′-UTR of hOGG1; and AluYb8 insertion in MUTYH (AluYb8MUTYH, rs10527342) and investigated their synergistic effect on the risk of T2DM in the Chinese population. The genotypes were determined by electrophoresis, a high-resolution melting technique and sequencing of PCR products. Our results showed that the c.247G>A variant in the hMTH1 gene increased the risk of T2DM in > 55 years of age groups (OR = 1.579; 95%CI: 1.029–2.421). The set of c.-53G>C, c.-23A>G and c.-18G>T variants detected in the 5′-UTR of the hOGG1 gene and the AluYb8 insertion in the MUTYH gene were each associated with an increased risk of T2DM (OR = 1.507, 95%CI: 1.122–2.024; OR = 1.229, 95%CI: 1.030–1.466, respectively). Combined analysis of the variations among the three genes suggested that the c.247G>A variant in hMTH1 combined with AluYb8MUTYH variant had a synergistic effect on increasing the risk of T2DM (OR = 1.635; 95%CI: 1.147–2.330). This synergy was also observed between the variants in the 5′-UTR of the hOGG1 and the AluYb8MUTYH variant (OR = 1.804; 95%CI: 1.254–2.595). Our results suggest, for the first time, the combined effects of AluYb8MUTYH with either hMTH1 c.247G>A or variants in the 5′-UTR of the hOGG1 on the risk of T2DM.  相似文献   

12.
The structural deviations as well as the alteration in the dynamics of DNA at mismatch sites are considered to have a crucial role in mismatch recognition followed by its repair utilizing mismatch repair family proteins. To compare the dynamics at a mismatch and a non-mismatch site, we incorporated 2-aminopurine, a fluorescent analogue of adenine next to a G.T mismatch, a C.C mismatch, or an unpaired T, and at several other non-mismatch positions. Rotational diffusion of 2-aminopurine at these locations, monitored by time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy, showed distinct differences in the dynamics. This alteration in the motional dynamics is largely confined to the normally matched base-pairs that are immediately adjacent to a mismatch/ unpaired base and could be used by MutS as a cue for mismatch-specific recognition. Interestingly, the enhanced dynamics associated with base-pairs adjacent to a mismatch are significantly restricted upon MutS binding, perhaps “resetting” the cues for downstream events that follow MutS binding. Recognition of such details of motional dynamics of DNA for the first time in the current study enabled us to propose a model that integrates the details of mismatch recognition by MutS as revealed by the high-resolution crystal structure with that of observed base dynamics, and unveils a minimal composite read-out involving the base mismatch and its adjacent normal base-pairs.  相似文献   

13.
DNA lesions arise from many endogenous and environmental agents, and such lesions can promote deleterious events leading to genomic instability and cell death. Base excision repair (BER) is the main DNA repair pathway responsible for repairing single strand breaks, base lesions and abasic sites in mammalian cells. During BER, DNA substrates and repair intermediates are channeled from one step to the next in a sequential fashion so that release of toxic repair intermediates is minimized. This includes handoff of the product of gap-filling DNA synthesis to the DNA ligation step. The conformational differences in DNA polymerase β (pol β) associated with incorrect or oxidized nucleotide (8-oxodGMP) insertion could impact channeling of the repair intermediate to the final step of BER, i.e., DNA ligation by DNA ligase I or the DNA Ligase III/XRCC1 complex. Thus, modified DNA ligase substrates produced by faulty pol β gap-filling could impair coordination between pol β and DNA ligase. Ligation failure is associated with 5′-AMP addition to the repair intermediate and accumulation of strand breaks that could be more toxic than the initial DNA lesions. Here, we provide an overview of the consequences of ligation failure in the last step of BER. We also discuss DNA-end processing mechanisms that could play roles in reversal of impaired BER.  相似文献   

14.
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are environmental pollutants, formed during incomplete burning of coal, oil and gas. Several PAHs have carcinogenic and mutagenic potencies, but these compounds must be activated in order to exert their mutagenic effects. One of the principal pathways proposed for metabolic activation of PAHs involves the cytochrome P450 enzymes. The DNA damaging potential of cytochrome P450-activated PAHs is generally associated with their bay and fjord regions, and the DNA repair response of PAHs containing such regions has been thoroughly studied. However, little is known about the repair of DNA damage resulting from metabolites from PAHs without bay and fjord regions. We have investigated the six-ringed PAH anthanthrene (dibenzo[def,mno]chrysene), which does not posses bay or fjord motifs. We analyzed the repair profile of human cell extracts and of cell cultures in response to DNA damage induced by cytochrome P450-activated anthanthrene. In cell extracts, functional nucleotide excision repair (NER) and mismatch repair (MMR) activities were necessary to trigger a response to anthanthrene metabolite-induced DNA damage. In cell cultures, NER was responsible for the repair of anthanthrene metabolite-induced DNA damage. However, when the NER pathway was inactivated, a residual repair pathway performed the DNA repair.  相似文献   

15.
Roles of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in damage to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) following ultraviolet (UV)-irradiation were investigated in the human hepatoma cell line SK-HEP-1. We altered the intracellular status of ROS by the overexpression of manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) and/or catalase. Using HPLC, we analyzed 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodGuo), known as a marker of damage to DNA molecules. UV-irradiation resulted in the accumulation of 8-oxodGuo in these cells. The overexpression of MnSOD enhanced the accumulation of 8-oxodGuo by UV. The co-overexpression of catalase inhibited the accumulation of 8-oxodGuo by UV in MnSOD-transfectants. The overexpression of MnSOD reduced the colony forming capacity in SK-HEP-1 cells and the co-overexpression of catalase with MnSOD stimulated the capacity compared to control. UV-irradiation inhibited the colony forming capacity in these cells; no difference was observed among the capacities of control, MnSOD- and catalase-transfectants. However, the overexpression of MnSOD/catalase significantly rescued the reduction of colony forming capacity by UV-irradiation. Our results suggest that the accumulation of hydrogen peroxide plays a key role in the oxidative damage to mtDNA of UV-irradiated cells, and also that the overexpression of both MnSOD and catalase reduces the mtDNA damage and blocks the growth inhibition by UV. Our results also indicate that the increased activity of MnSOD may lead to a toxic effect on mtDNA by UV-irradiation.  相似文献   

16.
Two benzo(a)pyrene metabolites were found to induce DNA strand breaks in cultured human fibroblasts. DNA strand breaks induced by the non- or weakly carcinogenic 9-hydroxy-benzo(a)pyrene were repaired within two hours, while those induced by the strongly carcinogenic trans-7,8-dihydro-7,8-dihydroxy-benzo(a)pyrene were repaired at a much slower rate.  相似文献   

17.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) constantly attack DNA. One of the best-characterized oxidative DNA lesions is 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxo-G). Many human diseases, such as cancer and neurodegenerative disorders, have been correlated with oxidative DNA damage. In the last few years, DNA polymerase (Pol) λ, one of the 15 cellular Pols, has been identified to play an important role in performing accurate translesion synthesis over 8-oxo-G. This is eminently important, since normally faithful replicative Pols α, δ and ε, with their tight active center, often wrongly incorporate adenine (A) opposite the 8-oxo-G lesion. A:8- oxo-G mispairs are accurately repaired by the pathway identified in our laboratory involving MutY DNA glycosylase homolog (MutYH) and Pol λ. Until now, very little was known about the spatial and temporal regulation of Pol λ and MutYH in active repair complexes. We now showed in our latest publication that the E3 ligase Mule can ubiquitinate and degrade Pol λ, and that the control of Pol λ levels by Mule has functional consequences for the ability of mammalian cells to deal with 8-oxo-G lesions. In contrast, phosphorylation of Pol λ by Cdk2/cyclinA counteracts this degradation by recruiting it to MutYH on chromatin to form active 8-oxo-G repair complexes.  相似文献   

18.
8-oxo-7,8-dihydroadenine (8-oxoAde) is a major product of adenine modification by reactive oxygen species. So far, only one mammalian DNA glycosylase, 8-oxoguanine-DNA-glycosylase 1 (OGG1), has been shown to excise 8-oxoAde, exclusively from pairs with Cyt. We have found that endonuclease VIII-like protein 1 (NEIL1), a mammalian homolog of bacterial endonuclease VIII, can efficiently remove 8-oxoAde from 8-oxoAde:Cyt pairs but not from other contexts. In an in vitro reconstituted system, reactions containing OGG1 produced a fully repaired product, whereas NEIL1 caused an abortive initiation of repair, stopping after 8-oxoAde removal and DNA strand cleavage. This block was partially relieved by polynucleotide kinase/3′-phosphatase. Thus, two alternative routes of 8-oxoAde repair may exist in mammals.  相似文献   

19.
Uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG) removes uracil generated by the deamination of cytosine or misincorporation of deoxyuridine monophosphate. Within the UDG superfamily, a fifth UDG family lacks a polar residue in the active-site motif, which mediates the hydrolysis of the glycosidic bond by activation of a water molecule in UDG families 1-4. We have determined the crystal structure of a novel family 5 UDG from Thermus thermophilus HB8 complexed with DNA containing an abasic site. The active-site structure suggests this enzyme uses both steric force and water activation for its excision reaction. A conserved asparagine residue acts as a ligand to the catalytic water molecule. The structure also implies that another water molecule acts as a barrier during substrate recognition. Based on no significant open-closed conformational change upon binding to DNA, we propose a "slide-in" mechanism for initial damage recognition.  相似文献   

20.
Unlike normal tissues, tumor cells possess a propensity for genomic instability, resulting from elevated oxidant levels produced by oncogenic signaling and aberrant cellular metabolism. Thus, targeting mechanisms that protect cancer cells from the tumor-inhibitory consequences of their redox imbalance and spontaneous DNA-damaging events is expected to have broad-spectrum efficacy and a high therapeutic index. One critical mechanism for tumor cell protection from oxidant stress is the hydrolysis of oxidized nucleotides. Human MutT homolog 1 (MTH1), the mammalian nudix (nucleoside diphosphate X) pyrophosphatase (NUDT1), protects tumor cells from oxidative stress-induced genomic DNA damage by cleansing the nucleotide pool of oxidized purine nucleotides. Depletion or pharmacologic inhibition of MTH1 results in genomic DNA strand breaks in many cancer cells. However, the mechanisms underlying how oxidized nucleotides, thought mainly to be mutagenic rather than genotoxic, induce DNA strand breaks are largely unknown. Given the recent therapeutic interest in targeting MTH1, a better understanding of such mechanisms is crucial to its successful translation into the clinic and in identifying the molecular contexts under which its inhibition is likely to be beneficial. Here we provide a comprehensive perspective on MTH1 function and its importance in protecting genome integrity, in the context of tumor-associated oxidative stress and the mechanisms that likely lead to irreparable DNA strand breaks as a result of MTH1 inhibition.  相似文献   

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