60 research outputs found
Mechanistic Insights on the Inhibition of C5 DNA Methyltransferases by Zebularine
In mammals DNA methylation occurs at position 5 of cytosine in a CpG context and regulates gene expression. It plays an important role in diseases and inhibitors of DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs)—the enzymes responsible for DNA methylation—are used in clinics for cancer therapy. The most potent inhibitors are 5-azacytidine and 5-azadeoxycytidine. Zebularine (1-(β-D-ribofuranosyl)-2(1H)- pyrimidinone) is another cytidine analog described as a potent inhibitor that acts by forming a covalent complex with DNMT when incorporated into DNA. Here we bring additional experiments to explain its mechanism of action. First, we observe an increase in the DNA binding when zebularine is incorporated into the DNA, compared to deoxycytidine and 5-fluorodeoxycytidine, together with a strong decrease in the dissociation rate. Second, we show by denaturing gel analysis that the intermediate covalent complex between the enzyme and the DNA is reversible, differing thus from 5-fluorodeoxycytidine. Third, no methylation reaction occurs when zebularine is present in the DNA. We confirm that zebularine exerts its demethylation activity by stabilizing the binding of DNMTs to DNA, hindering the methylation and decreasing the dissociation, thereby trapping the enzyme and preventing turnover even at other sites
Flaws in the current method for calculating methane emissions during dairy manure management in New Zealand
New Zealand's Greenhouse Gas Inventory (the NZ Inventory) currently estimates methane (CH4) emissions from anaerobic dairy effluent ponds by: (1) determining the total pond volume across New Zealand; (2) dividing this volume by depth to obtain the total pond surface area; and (3) multiplying this area by an observational average CH4 flux. Unfortunately, a mathematically erroneous determination of pond volume has led to an imbalanced equation and a geometry error was made when scaling-up the observational CH4 flux. Furthermore, even if these errors are corrected, the nationwide estimate still hinges on field data from a study that used a debatable method to measure pond CH4 emissions at a single site, as well as a potentially inaccurate estimation of the amount of organic waste anaerobically treated. The development of a new methodology is therefore critically needed
Psoralen interstrand cross-link repair is specifically altered by an adjacent triple-stranded structure
Targeting DNA-damaging agents to specific DNA sites by using sequence-specific DNA ligands has been successful in directing genomic modifications. The understanding of repair processing of such targeted damage and the influence of the adjacent complex is largely unknown. In this way, directed interstrand cross-links (ICLs) have already been generated by psoralen targeting. The mechanisms responsible for ICL removal are far from being understood in mammalian cells, with the proposed involvement of both mutagenic and recombinogenic pathways. Here, a unique ICL was introduced at a selected site by photoactivation of a psoralen moiety with the use of psoralen conjugates of triplex-forming oligonucleotides. The processing of psoralen ICL was evaluated in vitro and in cells for two types of cross-linked substrates, either containing a psoralen ICL alone or with an adjacent triple-stranded structure. We show that the presence of a neighbouring triplex structure interferes with different stages of psoralen ICL processing: (i) the ICL-induced DNA repair synthesis in HeLa cell extracts is inhibited by the triplex structure, as measured by the efficiency of ‘true’ and futile repair synthesis, stopping at the ICL site; (ii) in HeLa cells, the ICL removal via a nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway is delayed in the presence of a neighbouring triplex; and (iii) the binding to ICL of recombinant xeroderma pigmentosum A protein, which is involved in pre-incision recruitment of NER factors is impaired by the presence of the third DNA strand. These data characterize triplex-induced modulation of ICL repair pathways at specific steps, which might have implications for the controlled induction of targeted genomic modifications and for the associated cellular responses
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