7 research outputs found

    REPAIRtoireā€”a database of DNA repair pathways

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    REPAIRtoire is the first comprehensive database resource for systems biology of DNA damage and repair. The database collects and organizes the following types of information: (i) DNA damage linked to environmental mutagenic and cytotoxic agents, (ii) pathways comprising individual processes and enzymatic reactions involved in the removal of damage, (iii) proteins participating in DNA repair and (iv) diseases correlated with mutations in genes encoding DNA repair proteins. REPAIRtoire provides also links to publications and external databases. REPAIRtoire contains information about eight main DNA damage checkpoint, repair and tolerance pathways: DNA damage signaling, direct reversal repair, base excision repair, nucleotide excision repair, mismatch repair, homologous recombination repair, nonhomologous end-joining and translesion synthesis. The pathway/protein dataset is currently limited to three model organisms: Escherichia coli, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Homo sapiens. The DNA repair and tolerance pathways are represented as graphs and in tabular form with descriptions of each repair step and corresponding proteins, and individual entries are cross-referenced to supporting literature and primary databases. REPAIRtoire can be queried by the name of pathway, protein, enzymatic complex, damage and disease. In addition, a tool for drawing custom DNAā€“protein complexes is available online. REPAIRtoire is freely available and can be accessed at http://repairtoire.genesilico.pl/

    Lethal and mutagenic properties of MMS-generated DNA lesions in Escherichia coli cells deficient in BER and AlkB-directed DNA repair.

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    Methylmethane sulphonate (MMS), an S(N)2-type alkylating agent, generates DNA methylated bases exhibiting cytotoxic and mutagenic properties. Such damaged bases can be removed by a system of base excision repair (BER) and by oxidative DNA demethylation catalysed by AlkB protein. Here, we have shown that the lack of the BER system and functional AlkB dioxygenase results in (i) increased sensitivity to MMS, (ii) elevated level of spontaneous and MMS-induced mutations (measured by argE3 --> Arg(+) reversion) and (iii) induction of the SOS response shown by visualization of filamentous growth of bacteria. In the xth nth nfo strain additionally mutated in alkB gene, all these effects were extreme and led to 'error catastrophe', resulting from the presence of unrepaired apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites and 1-methyladenine (1meA)/3-methylcytosine (3meC) lesions caused by deficiency in, respectively, BER and AlkB dioxygenase. The decreased level of MMS-induced Arg(+) revertants in the strains deficient in polymerase V (PolV) (bearing the deletion of the umuDC operon), and the increased frequency of these revertants in bacteria overproducing PolV (harbouring the pRW134 plasmid) indicate the involvement of PolV in the error-prone repair of 1meA/3meC and AP sites. Comparison of the sensitivity to MMS and the induction of Arg(+) revertants in the double nfo alkB and xth alkB, and the quadruple xth nth nfo alkB mutants showed that the more AP sites there are in DNA, the stronger the effect of the lack of AlkB protein. Since the sum of MMS-induced Arg(+) revertants in xth, nfo and nth xth nfo and alkB mutants is smaller than the frequency of these revertants in the BER(-) alkB(-) strain, we consider two possibilities: (i) the presence of AP sites in DNA results in relaxation of its structure that facilitates methylation and (ii) additional AP sites are formed in the BER(-) alkB(-) mutants

    The structural basis for the mutagenicity of O(6)-methyl-guanine lesions

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    Methylating agents are widespread environmental carcinogens that generate a broad spectrum of DNA damage. Methylation at the guanine O(6) position confers the greatest mutagenic and carcinogenic potential. DNA polymerases insert cytosine and thymine with similar efficiency opposite O(6)-methyl-guanine (O6MeG). We combined pre-steady-state kinetic analysis and a series of nine x-ray crystal structures to contrast the reaction pathways of accurate and mutagenic replication of O6MeG in a high-fidelity DNA polymerase from Bacillus stearothermophilus. Polymerases achieve substrate specificity by selecting for nucleotides with shape and hydrogen-bonding patterns that complement a canonical DNA template. Our structures reveal that both thymine and cytosine O6MeG base pairs evade proofreading by mimicking the essential molecular features of canonical substrates. The steric mimicry depends on stabilization of a rare cytosine tautomer in CĀ·O6MeGā€“polymerase complexes. An unusual electrostatic interaction between O-methyl protons and a thymine carbonyl oxygen helps stabilize TĀ·O6MeG pairs bound to DNA polymerase. Because DNA methylators constitute an important class of chemotherapeutic agents, the molecular mechanisms of replication of these DNA lesions are important for our understanding of both the genesis and treatment of cancer

    Structural Basis for Proficient Incorporation of dTTP Opposite O6-Methylguanine by Human DNA Polymerase Ī¹*

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    O6-Methylguanine (O6-methylG) is highly mutagenic and is commonly found in DNA exposed to methylating agents, even physiological ones (e.g. S-adenosylmethionine). The efficiency of a truncated, catalytic DNA polymerase Ī¹ core enzyme was determined for nucleoside triphosphate incorporation opposite O6-methylG, using steady-state kinetic analyses. The results presented here corroborate previous work from this laboratory using full-length pol Ī¹, which showed that dTTP incorporation occurs with high efficiency opposite O6-methylG. Misincorporation of dTTP opposite O6-methylG occurred with āˆ¼6-fold higher efficiency than incorporation of dCTP. Crystal structures of the truncated form of pol Ī¹ with O6-methylG as the template base and incoming dCTP or dTTP were solved and showed that O6-methylG is rotated into the syn conformation in the pol Ī¹ active site and that dTTP misincorporation by pol Ī¹ is the result of Hoogsteen base pairing with the adduct. Both dCTP and dTTP base paired with the Hoogsteen edge of O6-methylG. A single, short hydrogen bond formed between the N3 atom of dTTP and the N7 atom of O6-methylG. Protonation of the N3 atom of dCTP and bifurcation of the N3 hydrogen between the N7 and O6 atoms of O6-methylG allow base pairing of the lesion with dCTP. We conclude that differences in the Hoogsteen hydrogen bonding between nucleotides is the main factor in the preferential selectivity of dTTP opposite O6-methylG by human pol Ī¹, in contrast to the mispairing modes observed previously for O6-methylG in the structures of the model DNA polymerases Sulfolobus solfataricus Dpo4 and Bacillus stearothermophilus DNA polymerase I

    Human ABH3 structure and key residues for oxidative demethylation to reverse DNA/RNA damage

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    Methylating agents are ubiquitous in the environment, and central in cancer therapy. The 1-methyladenine and 3-methylcytosine lesions in DNA/RNA contribute to the cytotoxicity of such agents. These lesions are directly reversed by ABH3 (hABH3) in humans and AlkB in Escherichia coli. Here, we report the structure of the hABH3 catalytic core in complex with iron and 2-oxoglutarate (2OG) at 1.5 ƅ resolution and analyse key site-directed mutants. The hABH3 structure reveals the Ī²-strand jelly-roll fold that coordinates a catalytically active iron centre by a conserved His(1)-X-Asp/Glu-X(n)-His(2) motif. This experimentally establishes hABH3 as a structural member of the Fe(II)/2OG-dependent dioxygenase superfamily, which couples substrate oxidation to conversion of 2OG into succinate and CO(2). A positively charged DNA/RNA binding groove indicates a distinct nucleic acid binding conformation different from that predicted in the AlkB structure with three nucleotides. These results uncover previously unassigned key catalytic residues, identify a flexible hairpin involved in nucleotide flipping and ss/ds-DNA discrimination, and reveal self-hydroxylation of an active site leucine that may protect against uncoupled generation of dangerous oxygen radicals
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