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1.
Shah D  Gold B 《Biochemistry》2003,42(43):12610-12616
The use of DNA equilibrium binding molecules to transfer alkyl groups to specific positions on DNA is an approach to generating cytotoxic DNA damage while avoiding the formation of promutagenic lesions that increase the risk for the development of secondary cancer. We have previously reported that in vitro a neutral DNA equilibrium binding agent based on an N-methylpyrrolecarboxamide dipeptide (lex) and modified with an O-methyl sulfonate ester functionality (Me-lex) selectively affords N3-methyladenine lesions in >90% yield relative to the formation of other adducts. While in vitro interactions between the lex dipeptide and DNA have been thoroughly studied, in vivo interactions are more difficult to elucidate. We report herein the relationship between the in vivo formation of N3-methyladenine and toxicity in wild-type and base excision repair defective mutant Escherichia coli. In addition, it is demonstrated that both N3-methyladenine adduction and cytotoxicity can be inhibited in vivo with netropsin, a potent competitive inhibitor of binding of lex to DNA. The results show a clear relationship between the levels of N3-methyladenine and toxicity in an alkA/tag glycosylase mutant that cannot remove the adduct from its genome. For methyl methanesulfonate, which does not sequence selectively methylate DNA, a relationship between the formation of N3-methyladenine and toxicity is also observed. However, netropsin affects neither the level of N3-methyladenine nor the toxicity of methyl methanesulfonate in E. coli.  相似文献   

2.
The role of nucleotide excision repair and 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylases in removing cytotoxic lesions induced by N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) in Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli cells was examined. Compared to the E. coli wild-type strain, the S. typhimurium wild-type strain was more sensitive to the same dose of MNNG. Nucleotide excision repair in both bacterial species does not contribute significantly to the survival after MNNG treatment, indicating that the observed differences in survival between S. typhimurium and E. coli should be attributed to DNA-repair systems other than nucleotide excision repair. The survival of the E. coli alkA mutant strain is seriously affected by the lack of 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase II, accentuating the importance of this DNA-repair enzyme in protecting E. coli cells against the lethal effects of methylating agents. Following indications from our experiments, the existence of an alkA gene analogue in S. typhimurium has been questioned. Dot-blot hybridisation, using the E. coli alkA gene as a probe, was performed, and such a nucleotide sequence was not detected on S. typhimurium genomic DNA. The existence of constitutive 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase, analogous to the E. coli Tag gene product in S. typhimurium cells, suggested by the results is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Varadarajan S  Shah D  Dande P  Settles S  Chen FX  Fronza G  Gold B 《Biochemistry》2003,42(48):14318-14327
Minor groove specific DNA equilibrium binding peptides (lex) based on N-methylpyrrole-carboxamide and/or N-methylimidazolecarboxamide subunits have been modified with an O-methyl sulfonate ester functionality to target DNA methylation in the minor groove at Ade/Thy- and/or Gua/Cyt-rich sequences. HPLC and sequencing gel analyses show that the Me-lex compounds all selectively react with DNA to afford N3-alkyladenine as a major adduct. The formation of the N3-alkyladenine lesions is sequence-dependent based on the equilibrium binding preferences of the different lex peptides. In addition to the reaction at adenine, the molecules designed to target Gua/Cyt sequences also generate lesions at guanine; however, the methylation is not sequence dependent and takes places in the major groove at the N7-position. To determine if and how the level of the different DNA adducts and the sequence selectivity for their formation affects cytotoxicity, the Me-lex analogues were tested in wild type Escherichia coli and in mutant strains defective in base excision repair (tag and/or alkA or apn). The results demonstrate the importance of 3-methyladenine, and in some cases 3-methylguanine, lesions in cellular toxicity, and the dominant protective role of the DNA glycosylases. There is no evidence that the sequence specificity is related to toxicity.  相似文献   

4.
A recombinant plasmid containing a Serratia marcescens DNA repair gene has been analyzed biochemically and genetically in Escherichia coli mutants deficient for repair of alkylated DNA. The cloned gene suppressed sensitivity to methyl methanesulfonate of an E. coli strain deficient in 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylases I and II (i.e., E. coli tag alkA) and two different E. coli recA mutants. Attempts to suppress the methyl methanesulfonate sensitivity of the E. coli recA mutant by using the cloned E. coli tag and alkA genes were not successful. Southern blot analysis did not reveal any homology between the S. marcescens gene and various known E. coli DNA repair genes. Biochemical analysis with the S. marcescens gene showed that the encoded DNA repair protein liberated 3-methyladenine from alkylated DNA, indicating that the DNA repair molecular is an S. marcescens 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase. The ability to suppress both types of E. coli DNA repair mutations, however, suggests that the S. marcescens gene is a unique bacterial DNA repair gene.  相似文献   

5.
DNA repair mechanisms affecting cytotoxicity by streptozotocin in E. coli   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Mechanisms underlying cytotoxicity by the monofunctional nitrosourea streptozotocin (STZ) were evaluated in DNA repair-deficient E. coli mutants. Strains not proficient in recombinational repair which lack either RecA protein or RecBC gene products were highly sensitive to STZ. In contrast, cells that constitutively synthesize RecA protein and cannot initiate SOS repair mechanisms because of uncleavable LexA repressor (recAo98 lexA3) were resistant to this drug compared to a lexA3 strain. Further, E. coli cells lacking both 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylases I (tag) and II (alkA) also were highly sensitive to STZ. DNA synthesis was most inhibited by STZ in recA and alkA tag E. coli mutants, but was suppressed less markedly in wild-type and recBC cells. DNA degradation was most extensive in recA E. coli after STZ treatment, while comparable in recBC, alkA tag, and wild-type cells. Although increased single-stranded DNA breaks were present after STZ treatment in recA and recBC mutants compared to the wild type, no significant increase in DNA single-stranded breaks was noted in alkA tag E. coli. Further, DNA breaks in recBC cells were repaired, while those present in recA cells were not. These findings establish the critical importance of both recombinational repair and 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase in ameliorating cytotoxic effects and DNA damage caused by STZ in E. coli.  相似文献   

6.
Adozelesin is a synthetic analog of the antitumor antibiotic CC-1065, which alkylates the N3 of adenine in the minor groove in a sequence-selective manner. Since the cytotoxic potency of a DNA alkylating agent can be modulated by DNA excision repair system, we investigated whether nucleotide excision repair (NER) and base excision repair (BER) enzymes are able to excise the bulky DNA adduct induced by adozelesin. The UvrABC nuclease and 3-methyladenine-DNA glycosylase, that exhibit a broad spectrum of substrate specificity, were selected as typical NER and BER enzymes, respectively. The adozelesin-DNA adduct was first formed in the radiolabeled restriction DNA fragment and its excision by purified repair enzymes was monitored on a DNA sequencing gel. The treatment of the DNA adduct with a purified UvrABC nuclease and sequencing gel analysis of cleaved DNA showed that UvrABC nuclease was able to incise the adozelesin adduct. The incision site corresponded to the general nuclease incision site. Excision of this adduct by 3-methyladenine-DNA glycosylases was determined following the treatment of the DNA adduct with a homogeneous recombinant bacterial, rat and human 3-methyladenine-DNA glycosylases. Abasic sites generated by DNA glycosyalses were cleaved by the associated lyase activity of the E. coli formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (Fpg). Resolution of cleaved DNA on a sequencing gel showed that the DNA glycosylase from different sources could not release the N3-adenine adducts. A cytotoxicity assay using E. coli repair mutant strains showed that E. coli mutant strains defective in the uvrA gene were more sensitive to cell killing by adozelesin than E. coli mutant strain defective in the alkA gene or the wild type. These results suggest that the NER pathway seems to be the major excision repair system in protecting cells from the cytotoxicity of adozelesin.  相似文献   

7.
We have constructed plasmids which overproduce the tag and alkA gene products of Escherichia coli, i.e., 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylases I and II. The tag and alkA gene products were identified radiochemically in maxi- or minicells as polypeptides of 21 and 30 kilodaltons, respectively, which are consistent with the gel filtration molecular weights of the enzyme activities, thus confirming the identity of the cloned genes. High expression of the tag+-coded glycosylase almost completely suppressed the alkylation sensitivity of alkA mutants, indicating that high levels of 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase I will eliminate the need for 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase II in repair of alkylated DNA. Furthermore, overproduction of the alkA+-coded glycosylase greatly sensitizes wild-type cells to alkylation, suggesting that only a limited expression of this enzyme will allow efficient DNA repair.  相似文献   

8.
Nucleotide sequence of the tag gene from Escherichia coli.   总被引:14,自引:3,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
We have determined the complete nucleotide sequence of the tag gene, encoding 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase I from Escherichia coli. From the nucleotide sequence it is deduced that the tag enzyme consists of 187 amino-acids and has a calculated molecular weight of 21.1 kdaltons. The tag enzyme is unusually rich in cysteine (8 residues) with a cluster of three consecutive cysteines near the C-terminal end. The tag coded DNA glycosylase does not show significant sequence homology to the alkA coded glycosylase in spite of that both of these enzymes catalyze the release of free 3-methyladenine from alkylated DNA.  相似文献   

9.
Escherichia coli has two DNA glycosylases for repair of DNA damage caused by simple alkylating agents. The inducible AlkA DNA glycosylase (3-methyladenine [m3A] DNA glycosylase II) removes several different alkylated bases including m3A and 3-methylguanine (m3G) from DNA, whereas the constitutively expressed Tag enzyme (m3A DNA glycosylase I) has appeared to be specific for excision of m3A. In this communication we have reexamined the substrate specificity of Tag by using synthetic DNA rich in GC base pairs to facilitate detection of any possible methyl-G removal. In such DNA alkylated with [3H]dimethyl sulphate, we found that m3G was excised from double-stranded DNA by both glycosylases, although more efficiently by AlkA than by Tag. This was further confirmed using both N-[3H]methyl-N-nitrosourea- and [3H]dimethyl sulphate-treated native DNA, from which Tag excised m3G with an efficiency that was about 70 times lower than for AlkA. These results can explain the previous observation that high levels of Tag expression will suppress the alkylation sensitivity of alkA mutant cells, further implying that m3G is formed in quantity sufficient to represent an important cytotoxic lesion if left unrepaired in cells exposed to alkylating agents.  相似文献   

10.
DNA is constantly exposed to endogenous andexogenous alkylating agents that can modify its bases,resulting in mutagenesis in the absence of DNA repair [1,2]. Alkylation damage is removed by the action of DNA glycosylases, which initiate the base excision repair pathway and protect the sequence information of the genome [3-5]. We have identified a new class of methylpurine DNA glycosylase, designated MpgII, that is a member of the endonuclease III family of DNA repair enzymes. We expressed and purified MpgII from Thermotoga maritima and found that the enzyme releases both 7-methylguanine and 3-methyladenine from DNA. We cloned the MpgII genes from T. maritima and from Aquifex aeolicus and found that both genes could restore methylmethanesulfonate (MMS) resistance to Escherichia coli alkA tagA double mutants, which are deficient in the repair of alkylated bases. Analogous genes are found in other Bacteria and Archaea and appear to be the only genes coding for methylpurine DNA glycosylase activity in these organisms. MpgII is the fifth member of the endonuclease III family of DNA repair enzymes, suggesting that the endonuclease III protein scaffold has been modified during evolution to recognize and repair a variety of DNA damage.  相似文献   

11.
Nitric oxide (NO(.)) is critical to numerous biological processes, including signal transduction and macrophage-mediated immunity. In this study, we have explored the biological effects of NO(.)-induced DNA damage on Escherichia coli. The relative importance of base excision repair, nucleotide excision repair (NER), and recombinational repair in preventing NO(.)-induced toxicity was determined. E. coli strains lacking either NER or DNA glycosylases (including those that repair alkylation damage [alkA tag strain], oxidative damage [fpg nei nth strain], and deaminated cytosine [ung strain]) showed essentially wild-type levels of NO(.) resistance. However, apyrimidinic/apurinic (AP) endonuclease-deficient cells (xth nfo strain) were very sensitive to killing by NO(.), which indicates that normal processing of abasic sites is critical for defense against NO(.). In addition, recA mutant cells were exquisitely sensitive to NO(.)-induced killing. Both SOS-deficient (lexA3) and Holliday junction resolvase-deficient (ruvC) cells were very sensitive to NO(.), indicating that both SOS and recombinational repair play important roles in defense against NO(.). Furthermore, strains specifically lacking double-strand end repair (recBCD strains) were very sensitive to NO(.), which suggests that NO(.) exposure leads to the formation of double-strand ends. One consequence of these double-strand ends is that NO(.) induces homologous recombination at a genetically engineered substrate. Taken together, it is now clear that, in addition to the known point mutagenic effects of NO(.), it is also important to consider recombination events among the spectrum of genetic changes that NO(. ) can induce. Furthermore, the importance of recombinational repair for cellular survival of NO(.) exposure reveals a potential susceptibility factor for invading microbes.  相似文献   

12.
We report here the molecular isolation of a DNA fragment which encodes Tag-like activity from the Gram-negative bacterium Serratia marcescens. A recombinant plasmid encoding Tag-like activity was isolated from a S. marcescens plasmid gene library by complementation of an Escherichia coli tag mutant, which is deficient in 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase I. The clone complements E. coli tag, recA, alkA, but not alkB, mutants for resistance to the DNA-damaging agent methyl methanesulphonate (MMS). The coding region of the Tag activity, initially isolated on a 6.5kb BamHI fragment, was defined to a 1.8kb BglII-SmaI fragment. Labelling of plasmid-encoded proteins using maxicells revealed that the 1.8kb fragment encodes two proteins of molecular weights 42,000 and 16,000. Data presented here suggest that the cloned fragment encodes a DNA repair protein(s) that has similar activity to the 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase I of E. coli.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Base excision repair of DNA alkylation damage is initiated by a methylpurine DNA glycosylase (MPG) function. Such enzymes have previously been characterized from bacteria and eukarya, but not from archaea. We identified activity for the release of methylated bases from DNA in cell-free extracts of Archaeoglobus fulgidus, an archaeon growing optimally at 83 degrees C. An open reading frame homologous to the alkA gene of Escherichia coli was overexpressed and identified as a gene encoding an MPG enzyme (M(r) = 34 251), hereafter designated afalkA. The purified AfalkA protein differs from E. coli AlkA by excising alkylated bases only, from DNA, in the following order of efficiency: 3-methyladenine (m(3)A) > 3-methylguanine approximately 7-methyladenine > 7-methylguanine. Although the rate of enzymatic release of m(3)A is highest in the temperature range of 65-75 degrees C, it is only reduced by 50% at 45 degrees C, a temperature that does not support growth of A. fulgidus. At temperatures above 75 degrees C, nonenzymatic release of methylpurines predominates. The results suggest that the biological function of AfalkA is to excise m(3)A from DNA at suboptimal and maybe even mesophilic temperatures. This hypothesis is further supported by the observation that the afalkA gene function suppresses the alkylation sensitivity of the E. coli tag alkA double mutant. The amino acid sequence similarity and evolutionary relationship of AfalkA with other MPG enzymes from the three domains of life are described and discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Base excision repair is initiated by DNA glycosylases removing inappropriate bases from DNA. One group of these enzymes, comprising 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase II (AlkA) from Escherichia coli and related enzymes from other organisms, has been found to have an unusual broad specificity towards quite different base structures. We tested whether such enzymes might also be capable of removing normal base residues from DNA. The native enzymes from E.coli, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and human cells promoted release of intact guanines with significant frequencies, and further analysis of AlkA showed that all the normal bases can be removed. Transformation of E. coli with plasmids expressing different levels of AlkA produced an increased spontaneous mutation frequency correlated with the expression levels, indicating that excision of normal bases occurs at biologically significant rates. We propose that the broad specificity 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylases represent a general type of repair enzyme 'pulling' bases in DNA largely at random, without much preference for a specific structure. The specificity for release of damaged bases occurs because base structure alterations cause instability of the base-sugar bonds. Damaged bases are therefore released more readily than normal bases once the bond activation energy is reduced further by the enzyme. Qualitatively, the model correlates quite well with the relative rate of excision observed for most, if not all, of the substrates described for AlkA and analogues.  相似文献   

16.
Zhao B  O'Brien PJ 《Biochemistry》2011,50(20):4350-4359
The Escherichia coli 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase II protein (AlkA) recognizes a broad range of oxidized and alkylated base lesions and catalyzes the hydrolysis of the N-glycosidic bond to initiate the base excision repair pathway. Although the enzyme was one of the first DNA repair glycosylases to be discovered more than 25 years ago and there are multiple crystal structures, the mechanism is poorly understood. Therefore, we have characterized the kinetic mechanism for the AlkA-catalyzed excision of the deaminated purine, hypoxanthine. The multiple-turnover glycosylase assays are consistent with Michaelis-Menten kinetics. However, under single-turnover conditions that are commonly employed for studying other DNA glycosylases, we observe an unusual biphasic protein saturation curve. Initially, the observed rate constant for excision increases with an increasing level of AlkA protein, but at higher protein concentrations, the rate constant decreases. This behavior can be most easily explained by tight binding to DNA ends and by crowding of multiple AlkA protamers on the DNA. Consistent with this model, crystal structures have shown the preferential binding of AlkA to DNA ends. By varying the position of the lesion, we identified an asymmetric substrate that does not show inhibition at higher concentrations of AlkA, and we performed pre-steady state and steady state kinetic analysis. Unlike the situation in other glycosylases, release of the abasic product is faster than N-glycosidic bond cleavage. Nevertheless, AlkA exhibits significant product inhibition under multiple-turnover conditions, and it binds approximately 10-fold more tightly to an abasic site than to a hypoxanthine lesion site. This tight binding could help protect abasic sites when the adaptive response to DNA alkylation is activated and very high levels of AlkA protein are present.  相似文献   

17.
DNA glycosylase recognition and catalysis   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
DNA glycosylases are the enzymes responsible for recognizing base lesions in the genome and initiating base excision DNA repair. Recent structural and biochemical results have provided novel insights into DNA damage recognition and repair. The basis of the recognition of the oxidative lesion 8-oxoguanine by two structurally unrelated DNA glycosylases is now understood and has been revealed to involve surprisingly similar strategies. Work on MutM (Fpg) has produced structures representing three discrete reaction steps. The NMR structure of 3-methyladenine glycosylase I revealed its place among the structural families of DNA glycosylases and the X-ray structure of SMUG1 likewise confirmed that this protein is a member of the uracil DNA glycosylase superfamily. A novel disulfide cross-linking strategy was used to obtain the long-anticipated structure of MutY bound to DNA containing an A*oxoG mispair.  相似文献   

18.
Human alkyladenine glycosylase (AAG) and Escherichia coli 3-methyladenine glycosylase (AlkA) are base excision repair glycosylases that recognize and excise a variety of alkylated bases from DNA. The crystal structures of these enzymes have provided insight into their substrate specificity and mechanisms of catalysis. Both enzymes utilize DNA bending and base-flipping mechanisms to expose and bind substrate bases. Crystal structures of AAG complexed to DNA suggest that the enzyme selects substrate bases through a combination of hydrogen bonding and the steric constraints of the active site, and that the enzyme activates a water molecule for an in-line backside attack of the N-glycosylic bond. In contrast to AAG, the structure of the AlkA-DNA complex suggests that AlkA substrate recognition and catalytic specificity are intimately integrated in a S(N)1 type mechanism in which the catalytic Asp238 directly promotes the release of modified bases.  相似文献   

19.
The genome continuously suffers damage due to its reactivity with chemical and physical agents. Finding such damage in genomes (that can be several million to several billion nucleotide base pairs in size) is a seemingly daunting task. 3-Methyladenine DNA glycosylases can initiate the base excision repair (BER) of an extraordinarily wide range of substrate bases. The advantage of such broad substrate recognition is that these enzymes provide resistance to a wide variety of DNA damaging agents; however, under certain circumstances, the eclectic nature of these enzymes can confer some biological disadvantages. Solving the X-ray crystal structures of two 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylases, and creating cells and animals altered for this activity, contributes to our understanding of their enzyme mechanism and how such enzymes influence the biological response of organisms to several different types of DNA damage. BioEssays 21:668–676, 1999. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
The poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) is involved in cell recovery from DNA damage, such as methylation of N3-adenine, that activates the base excision repair process. In the present study we demonstrated that MeOSO(2)(CH(2))(2)-lexitropsin (Me-Lex), a methylating agent that almost exclusively produces N3-methyladenine, induced different modalities of cell death in human leukemic cell lines, depending on the presence of PARP inhibitor. Growth inhibition, provoked by the combination of Me-Lex and PARP inhibitor, was associated with a marked down-regulation of c-myc, increased generation of single strand breaks and apoptosis. When used as single agent, at concentrations that saturated cell repair ability, Me-Lex induced mainly cell death by necrosis. Surprisingly, addition of a PARP inhibitor enhanced apoptosis and reduced the early appearance of necrosis. Telomerase activity was completely suppressed in cells exposed to Me-Lex alone, by 24 h after treatment, whereas it did not change when Me-Lex was combined with PARP inhibitor. Thereafter, inhibition of telomerase was observed with both treatments. The results suggest new insights on different modalities of cell death induced by high levels of N3-methyladenine per se, or by the methylated base in the presence of PARP inhibitor.  相似文献   

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