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1.
We have created a cell line that can repair damage in chromosomal DNA and in herpes virus, while not repairing the same damage in shuttle vectors (pZ189 and pRSVcat). This cell line, a xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) revertant, repairs the minor (6-4)-photoproducts, but not cyclobutane dimers, in chromosomal DNA. The phenotype of this revertant after irradiation with ultraviolet (UV) light is the same as that of normal cells for survival, repair replication, recovery of rates of DNA and RNA synthesis, and sister-chromatid exchange formation, which indicates that a failure to mend cyclobutane dimers may be irrelevant to the fate of irradiated human cells. The two shuttle vectors were grown in Escherichia coli and assayed during transient passage in human cells, whereas the herpes virus was grown and assayed exclusively in mammalian cells. The ability of the XP revertant to distinguish between the shuttle vector and herpes virus DNA molecules according to their ‘cultural background’, i.e., bacterial or mammalian, may indicate that one component of the repair of UV damage involves gene products that recognize DNA markers that are uniquely mammalian, such as DNA methylation patterns. This component of excision repair may be involved in the original defect and the reversion of XP group A cells.  相似文献   

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Cells derived from individuals with mutations in the xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group A gene (XP-A gene) are hypersensitive to UV light and have a severe defect in nucleotide excision repair of damaged DNA. UV-resistant revertant cell lines can arise from XP-A cells in culture. Cells of one such revertant, XP129, were previously shown to remove (6-4) photoproducts from irradiated DNA, but to have poor repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers. To analyze the biochemical nature of the reversion, whole cell extracts were prepared from the SV40-immortalized fibroblast cell lines XP12RO (an XP-A cell line), the revertant XP129 (derived from XP12RO), and 1BR.3N (from a normal individual). The ability of extracts to carry out repair synthesis in UV-irradiated DNA was examined, and immunoblots were performed using antiserum that recognizes XP-A protein. XP12RO extracts exhibited a very low level of repair and no detectable XP-A protein, but repair activity could be conferred by adding purified XP-A protein to the reaction mixture. XP129 extracts have essentially normal repair synthesis consistent with the observation that most repair of UV-irradiated DNA by extracts appears to occur at (6-4) photoproducts. An XP-A polypeptide of normal size was present in XP129, but in reduced amounts. The results indicate that in XP129 a mutational event has converted the inactive XP12RO XP-A gene into a form which expresses an active XP-A protein.  相似文献   

4.
Trichothiodystrophy is a genetic disease which in the majority of cases studied is associated with a deficiency in the ability to repair UV damage in cellular DNA. Three categories of UV response have been identified. In type 1 the response is completely normal, whereas type 2 cells are deficient in excision-repair, with properties indistinguishable from those of XP complementation group D. Type 3 cells have normal survival following UV-irradiation and normal rates of removal of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer sites. Nevertheless repair synthesis is reduced by 50% in these cell strains and this is associated with a marked reduction in the repair of 6-4 photoproducts from cellular DNA. The present results show that 50% or more of repair synthesis at early times after irradiation of normal primary human fibroblasts is attributable to repair of 6-4 products. They also suggest that repair of cyclobutane dimers is crucial for cell survival.  相似文献   

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Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) complementation group E gene product, damaged DNA-binding protein 2 (DDB2), is a subunit of the DDB heterodimeric protein complex with high specificity for binding to a variety of DNA helix-distorting lesions. DDB is believed to play a role in the initial step of damage recognition in mammalian nucleotide excision repair (NER) of ultraviolet light (UV)-induced photolesions. It has been shown that DDB2 is rapidly degraded after cellular UV irradiation. However, the relevance of DDB2 degradation to its functionality in NER is still unknown. Here, we have provided evidence that Cullin 4A (CUL-4A), a key component of CUL-4A-based ubiquitin ligase, mediates DDB2 degradation at the damage sites and regulates the recruitment of XPC and the repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers. We have shown that CUL-4A can be identified in a UV-responsive protein complex containing both DDB subunits. CUL-4A was visualized in localized UV-irradiated sites together with DDB2 and XPC. Degradation of DDB2 could be blocked by silencing CUL-4A using small interference RNA or by treating cells with proteasome inhibitor MG132. This blockage resulted in prolonged retention of DDB2 at the subnuclear DNA damage foci within micropore irradiated cells. Knock down of CUL-4A also decreased recruitment of the damage recognition factor, XPC, to the damaged foci and concomitantly reduced the removal of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers from the entire genome. These results suggest that CUL-4A mediates the proteolytic degradation of DDB2 and that this degradation event, initiated at the lesion sites, regulates damage recognition by XPC during the early steps of NER.  相似文献   

6.
Host-cell reactivation, that is, the degree of survival of Herpes simplex virus after UV irradiation, was high in African green monkey BSC-1 cells, intermediate in normal human fibroblasts and human FL cells, and low in both xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) cells and mouse L cells. However, colony-forming ability after UV was high for FL, normal human fibroblasts and L cells, slightly low for BSC-1 cells and extremely low for XP cells. During the 24-h post-UV incubation period, up to about 50% of the thymine-containing dimers in the acid-insoluble DNA fraction disappeared at an almost equal rate for BSC-1, FL and normal human cells but remained unaltered for the XP cells. Alkaline sucrose gradient centrifugation of DNA after UV irradiation revealed only a slight difference between FL and BSC-1 cells in the kinetics of formation of single-strand breaks and their apparent repair. From these and the previously known characters of L cells possessing reduced excision-repair ability, if any, we may conclude that, if the survival of UV-irradiated Herpes simplex virus on a test line of human or other mammalian cells is as low as that on excisionless XP cells, then it is very probable that the test cell line is defective in excision repair. This reasoning leads to the presumptive conclusion that mouse L cells have an enhanced post-replication repair other than excision repair to deal with UV damage responsible for inactivation of colony-forming ability.  相似文献   

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Do host cell repair processes affect the mutagenesis of UV-irradiated virus in human cells? The answer was obtained by investigating the mutagenesis of UV-irradiated herpes simplex virus after the irradiated virus was grown in human cells that possess normal repair capacity (normal) or lack excision repair (XPA) or post-replication repair (XP var). Evidence is presented which indicate that XPA cells express no host cell reactivation, while XP var cells express the normal level. Viral mutagenesis was measured as the fraction of the progeny of the surviving virus capable of plaque formation in the presence of iododeoxycytidine. In the normal and XPA cells mutagenesis of the irradiated virus increased linearly with UV exposure. The UV exposure needed to yield a given mutagenesis level for virus grown in XPA cells was much lower than that for virus grown in normal cells. However, when the mutation frequencies were compared at similar virus survival levels, the data from virus grown in normal cells and in XPA cells were indistinguishable. Mutagenesis in XP var cells increased as dose squared and was similar in magnitude to that in normal cells. Thus the excision repair of normal cells which provided host cell reactivation by removing lethal UV damage also removed mutagenic lesions from the virus with the same efficiency, while the repair deficiency of XP var cells had a minor role in host cell reactivation and in mutagenesis. This demonstrates that in human cells host cell reactivation by excision repair is primarily an error-free process.  相似文献   

8.
Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) patients with inherited defects in nucleotide excision repair (NER) are unable to excise from their DNA bulky photoproducts induced by UV radiation and therefore develop accelerated actinic damage, including cancer, on sun-exposed tissue. Some XP patients also develop a characteristic neurodegeneration believed to result from their inability to repair neuronal DNA damaged by endogenous metabolites since the harmful UV radiation in sunlight does not reach neurons. Free radicals, which are abundant in neurons, induce DNA lesions that, if unrepaired, might cause the XP neurodegeneration. Searching for such a lesion, we developed a synthesis for 8,5'-(S)-cyclo-2'-deoxyadenosine (cyclo-dA), a free radical-induced bulky lesion, and incorporated it into DNA to test its repair in mammalian cell extracts and living cells. Using extracts of normal and mutant Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells to test for NER and adult rat brain extracts to test for base excision repair, we found that cyclo-dA is repaired by NER and not by base excision repair. We measured host cell reactivation, which reflects a cell's capacity for NER, by transfecting CHO and XP cells with DNA constructs containing a single cyclo-dA or a cyclobutane thymine dimer at a specific site on the transcribed strand of a luciferase reporter gene. We found that, like the cyclobutane thymine dimer, cyclo-dA is a strong block to gene expression in CHO and human cells. Cyclo-dA was repaired extremely poorly in NER-deficient CHO cells and in cells from patients in XP complementation group A with neurodegeneration. Based on these findings, we propose that cyclo-dA is a candidate for an endogenous DNA lesion that might contribute to neurodegeneration in XP.  相似文献   

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A UV-resistant revertant (XP129) of a xeroderma pigmentosum group A cell line has been reported to be totally deficient in repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) but proficient in repair of 6-4 photoproducts. This finding has been interpreted to mean that CPDs play no role in cell killing by UV. We have analyzed the fine structure of repair of CPDs in the dihydrofolate reductase gene in the revertant. In this essential, active gene, we observe that repair of the transcribed strand is as efficient as that in normal, repair-proficient human cells, but repair of the nontranscribed strand is not. Within 4 h after UV at 7.5 J/m2, over 50% of the CPDs were removed, and by 8 h, 80% of the CPDs were removed. In contrast, there was essentially no removal from the nontranscribed strand even by 24 h. Our results demonstrate that overall repair measurements can be misleading, and they support the hypothesis that removal of CPDs from the transcribed strands of expressed genes is essential for UV resistance.  相似文献   

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We have used mathematical modeling and statistical analysis to examine the correlation between UV-induced DNA damage and resulting base-substitution mutations in mammalian cells. The frequency and site specificity of UV-induced photoproducts in the supF gene of the pZ189 shuttle vector plasmid were compared with the frequency and site specificity of base-substitution mutations induced upon passage of the UV-irradiated vector in monkey cells. The hypothesis that the observed mutational spectrum is due to a preferential insertion of adenosine opposite UV photoproducts in the DNA template was found to best explain the mutational data. Models in which it was postulated that only (6-4) photoproducts, and not cyclobutane dimers, are mutagenic, or that the relative frequency of photoproduct formation does not influence mutation frequencies, fit the data much less well. This analysis demonstrates that molecular mechanisms of mutagenesis in mammalian cells can be deduced from mutational data obtained with a shuttle vector system.  相似文献   

12.
The fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, possesses a UV-damaged DNA endonuclease-dependent excision repair (UVER) pathway in addition to nucleotide excision repair pathway for UV-induced DNA damage. We examined cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer removal from the myo2 locus on the nuclear genome and the coI locus on the mitochondrial genome by the two repair pathways. While nucleotide excision repair repairs damage only on the nuclear genome, UVER efficiently removes cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers on both nuclear and mitochondrial genomes. The ectopically expressed wild type UV-damaged DNA endonuclease was localized to both nucleus and mitochondria, while modifications of N-terminal methionine codons restricted its localization to either of two organelles, suggesting an alternative usage of multiple translation initiation sites for targeting the protein to different organelles. By introducing the same mutations into the chromosomal copy of the uvde(+) gene, we selectively inactivated UVER in either the nucleus or the mitochondria. The results of UV survival experiments indicate that although UVER efficiently removes damage on the mitochondrial genome, UVER in the mitochondria hardly contributes to UV resistance of S. pombe cells. We suggest a possible UVER function in mitochondria as a backup system for other UV damage tolerance mechanisms.  相似文献   

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Summary Recombination frequencies for two sets of genetic markers of herpes simplex virus were determined in various host cells with and without ultraviolet irradiation of the virus. UV irradiation increased the recombination frequency in all the cell types studied in direct proportion to the unrepaired lethal damage. In human skin fibroblasts derived from a patient with xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) of complementation group A, a given dose of UV stimulated recombination more than that in fibroblasts from normal individuals. On the other hand, UV stimulation of HSV recombination was slightly less than normal in fibroblasts derived from a patient with a variant form XP and from an ataxia telangiectasia patient. Caffeine, an agent known to inhibit repair of UV damage, reduced recombination in most of the cell types studied but did not suppress the UV-induced increase in recombination. These findings suggest that for virus DNA with the same number of unrepaired UV-lesions, each of the tested cell types promoted HSV-recombination to an equivalent extent.  相似文献   

15.
DNA excision repair modulates the mutagenic effect of many genotoxic agents. The recently observed strand specificity for removal of UV-induced cyclobutane dimers from actively transcribed genes in mammalian cells could influence the nature and distribution of mutations in a particular gene. To investigate this, we have analyzed UV-induced DNA repair and mutagenesis in the same gene, i.e. the hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl-transferase (hprt) gene. In 23 hprt mutants from V79 Chinese hamster cells induced by 2 J/m2 UV we found a strong strand bias for mutation induction: assuming that pre-mutagenic lesions occur at dipyrimidine sequences, 85% of the mutations could be attributed to lesions in the nontranscribed strand. Analysis of DNA repair in the hprt gene revealed that more than 90% of the cyclobutane dimers were removed from the transcribed strand within 8 hours after irradiation with 10 J/m2 UV, whereas virtually no dimer removal could be detected from the nontranscribed strand even up to 24 hr after UV. These data present the first proof that strand specific repair of DNA lesions in an expressed mammalian gene is associated with a strand specificity for mutation induction.  相似文献   

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BRG1 is a catalytic subunit of the human SWI/SNF-like BAF chromatin remodeling complexes. Recent findings have shown that inactivation of BRG1 sensitizes mammalian cells to various DNA damaging agents, including ultraviolet (UV) and ionizing radiation. However, it is unclear whether BRG1 facilitates nucleotide excision repair (NER). Here we show that re-expression of BRG1 in cells lacking endogenous BRG1 expression stimulates nucleotide excision repair of UV induced DNA damage. Using a micropore UV radiation technique, we demonstrate that recruitment of the DNA damage recognition protein XPC to sites of UV lesions is significantly disrupted when BRG1 is depleted. Chromatin immunoprecipitation of the endogenous DDB2 protein, which is involved in recruiting XPC to UV-induced CPDs (cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers), shows that elevated levels of BRG1 are associated with DDB2 in chromatin in response to UV radiation. Additionally, we detected slow BRG1 accumulation at sites of UV lesions. Our findings suggest that the chromatin remodeling factor BRG1 is recruited to sites of UV lesions to facilitate NER in human chromatin.  相似文献   

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The capacity of monolayers of both normal human and xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) filbroblasts to support plaque formation by herpes simplex virus was decreased when the monolayers were ultraviolet (UV) irradiated and infected with virus. Fibroblasts of XP complementation groups A, B, and D were sensitive to UV, being 4-6 fold more sensitive than either fibroblasts of XP complementation group C or fibroblasts from a normal individual. When the monolayers were irradiated 4 days prior to infection, the capacity of normal fibroblasts to support herpes virus growth recovered, whereas the capacity of the XP strains decreased further compared to that measured when infection immediately followed irradiation. Concurrent experiments with UV-irradiated herpes virus showed that the survival of this virus did not increase when infection by irradiated virus immediately followed irradiation of the monolayers. However, if the monolayers were irradiated 4 days prior to infection, the survival of this virus increased by a factor of nearly 2. Such Weigle reactivation (WR) occurred at lower fluences to the XP fibroblasts than to normal fibroblasts, suggesting that WR results from residual cellular DNA damage left after excision repair.  相似文献   

20.
We used a simian virus 40-based shuttle vector plasmid, pZ189, to determine the role of pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers in UV light-induced mutagenesis in monkey cells. The vector DNA was UV irradiated and then introduced into monkey cells by transfection. After replication, vector DNA was recovered from the cells and tested for mutations in its supF suppressor tRNA marker gene by transformation of Escherichia coli carrying a nonsense mutation in the beta-galactosidase gene. When the irradiated vector was treated with E. coli photolyase prior to transfection, pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers were removed selectively. Removal of approximately 90% of the pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers increased the biological activity of the vector by 75% and reduced its mutation frequency by 80%. Sequence analysis of 72 mutants recovered indicated that there were significantly fewer tandem double-base changes and G X C----A X T transitions (particularly at CC sites) after photoreactivation of the DNA. UV-induced photoproducts remained (although at greatly reduced levels) at all pyr-pyr sites after photoreactivation, but there was a relative increase in photoproducts at CC and TC sites and a relative decrease at TT and CT sites, presumably due to a persistence of (6-4) photoproducts at some CC and TC sites. These observations are consistent with the fact that mutations were found after photoreactivation at many sites at which only cyclobutane dimers would be expected to occur. From these results we conclude that UV-induced pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers are mutagenic in DNA replicated in monkey cells.  相似文献   

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