335 results on '"Geacintov NE"'
Search Results
2. Carcinogeneis. The major, N2-dG adduct of (+)-anti-B[a]PDE induces G→A mutations in a 5'-AGA-3' sequence context.
- Author
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Shukla, R, Geacintov, NE, and Loechler, EL
- Abstract
Previously, in a random mutagenesis study, the (+)-anti diol epoxide of benzo[a]pyrene [(+)-anti-B[a]PDE] was shown to induce a complex mutational spectrum in the supF gene of an Escherichia coli plasmid, which included insertions, deletions and base substitution mutations, notably a significant fraction of GC→TA, GC→AT and GC→CG mutations. At some sites, a single type of mutation dominated and to understand individual mutagenic pathways these sites were chosen for study by site-specific means to determine whether the major adduct, [+ta]-B[a]P-N2-dG, was responsible. [+ta]-B[a]P-N2-dG was shown to induce 95% G→T mutations in a 5'-TGC-3'sequence context and 80% G→A mutations in a 5'-CGT-3' sequence context. (+)-anti-B[a]PDE induced principally GC→CG mutations in the G133 sequence context (5'-AGA-3') in studies using both SOS-uninduced or SOS-induced E. coli. Herein, [+ta]-B[a]P-N2-dG is shown to induce principally G→A mutations (>90%) either without or with SOS induction in a closely related 5'-AGA-3' sequence context (identical over 7 bp). This is the first time that there has been a discrepancy between the mutagenic specificity of (+)-anti-B[a]PDE versus [+ta]-B[a]P-N2-dG. Eight explanations for this discordance are considered. Four are rule out; e.g. the second most prevalent adduct [+ca]-B[a]P-N2-dG also induces a preponderance of G→A mutations (>90%), so it also is not responsible for (+)-anti-B[a]PDE-induced G133→C mutations. The four explanations not ruled out are discussed and include that another minor adduct might be responsible and that the 5'-AGA'-3' sequence context differed slightly in the studies with [+ta]-B[a]P-N2-dG versus (+)-anti-B[a]PDE. In spite of the discordance, [+ta]-B[a]P-N2-dG induces G→A mutations in the context studied herein and this result has proven useful in generating a hypothesis for what conformations of [+ta]-B[a]P-N2-dG are responsible for G→T versus G→A mutations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1999
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3. Variable Inhibition of DNA Unwinding Rates Catalyzed by the SARS-CoV-2 Helicase Nsp13 by Structurally Distinct Single DNA Lesions.
- Author
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Sales AH, Fu I, Durandin A, Ciervo S, Lupoli TJ, Shafirovich V, Broyde S, and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- DNA metabolism, DNA chemistry, Humans, DNA Damage, COVID-19 virology, Kinetics, Methyltransferases, RNA Helicases, SARS-CoV-2 metabolism, Viral Nonstructural Proteins metabolism, Viral Nonstructural Proteins chemistry, DNA Helicases metabolism, DNA Helicases chemistry
- Abstract
The SARS-CoV-2 helicase, non-structural protein 13 (Nsp13), plays an essential role in viral replication, translocating in the 5' → 3' direction as it unwinds double-stranded RNA/DNA. We investigated the impact of structurally distinct DNA lesions on DNA unwinding catalyzed by Nsp13. The selected lesions include two benzo[ a ]pyrene (B[ a ]P)-derived dG adducts, the UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD), and the pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidone (6-4PP) photolesion. The experimentally observed unwinding rate constants ( k
obs ) and processivities ( P ) were examined. Relative to undamaged DNA, the kobs values were diminished by factors of up to ~15 for B[ a ]P adducts but only by factors of ~2-5 for photolesions. A minor-groove-oriented B[ a ]P adduct showed the smallest impact on P , which decreased by ~11% compared to unmodified DNA, while an intercalated one reduced P by ~67%. However, the photolesions showed a greater impact on the processivities; notably, the CPD, with the highest kobs value, exhibited the lowest P , which was reduced by ~90%. Our findings thus show that DNA unwinding efficiencies are lesion-dependent and most strongly inhibited by the CPD, leading to the conclusion that processivity is a better measure of DNA lesions' inhibitory effects than unwinding rate constants.- Published
- 2024
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4. Differing structures and dynamics of two photolesions portray verification differences by the human XPD helicase.
- Author
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Fu I, Geacintov NE, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- Humans, DNA, DNA Damage, DNA Helicases genetics, Ultraviolet Rays, DNA Repair, Pyrimidine Dimers
- Abstract
Ultraviolet light generates cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) and pyrimidine 6-4 pyrimidone (6-4PP) photoproducts that cause skin malignancies if not repaired by nucleotide excision repair (NER). While the faster repair of the more distorting 6-4PPs is attributed mainly to more efficient recognition by XPC, the XPD lesion verification helicase may play a role, as it directly scans the damaged DNA strand. With extensive molecular dynamics simulations of XPD-bound single-strand DNA containing each lesion outside the entry pore of XPD, we elucidate strikingly different verification processes for these two lesions that have very different topologies. The open book-like CPD thymines are sterically blocked from pore entry and preferably entrapped by sensors that are outside the pore; however, the near-perpendicular 6-4PP thymines can enter, accompanied by a displacement of the Arch domain toward the lesion, which is thereby tightly accommodated within the pore. This trapped 6-4PP may inhibit XPD helicase activity to foster lesion verification by locking the Arch to other domains. Furthermore, the movement of the Arch domain, only in the case of 6-4PP, may trigger signaling to the XPG nuclease for subsequent lesion incision by fostering direct contact between the Arch domain and XPG, and thereby facilitating repair of 6-4PP., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2023
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5. Inhibition of E. coli RecQ Helicase Activity by Structurally Distinct DNA Lesions: Structure-Function Relationships.
- Author
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Sales AH, Zheng V, Kenawy MA, Kakembo M, Zhang L, Shafirovich V, Broyde S, and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- DNA chemistry, Structure-Activity Relationship, Guanine metabolism, DNA Adducts metabolism, RecQ Helicases metabolism, Escherichia coli metabolism
- Abstract
DNA helicase unwinding activity can be inhibited by small molecules and by covalently bound DNA lesions. Little is known about the relationships between the structural features of DNA lesions and their impact on unwinding rates and processivities. Employing E.coli RecQ helicase as a model system, and various conformationally defined DNA lesions, the unwinding rate constants k
obs = kU + kD , and processivities P = (kU /(kU + kD ) were determined ( kU , unwinding rate constant; kD , helicase-DNA dissociation rate constant). The highest kobs values were observed in the case of intercalated benzo[ a ]pyrene (BP)-derived adenine adducts, while kobs values of guanine adducts with minor groove or base-displaced intercalated adduct conformations were ~10-20 times smaller. Full unwinding was observed in each case with the processivity P = 1.0 (100% unwinding). The kobs values of the non-bulky lesions T(6-4)T, CPD cyclobutane thymine dimers, and a guanine oxidation product, spiroiminodihydantoin (Sp), are up to 20 times greater than some of the bulky adduct values; their unwinding efficiencies are strongly inhibited with processivities P = 0.11 (CPD), 0.062 (T(6-4)T), and 0.63 (Sp). These latter observations can be accounted for by correlated decreases in unwinding rate constants and enhancements in the helicase DNA complex dissociation rate constants.- Published
- 2022
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6. Treatment of Human HeLa Cells with Black Raspberry Extracts Enhances the Removal of DNA Lesions by the Nucleotide Excision Repair Mechanism.
- Author
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Sales AH, Kolbanovskiy M, Geacintov NE, Chen KM, Sun YW, and El-Bayoumy K
- Abstract
As demonstrated by us earlier and by other researchers, a diet containing freeze-dried black raspberries (BRB) inhibits DNA damage and carcinogenesis in animal models. We tested the hypothesis that the inhibition of DNA damage by BRB is due, in part, to the enhancement of DNA repair capacity evaluated in the human HeLa cell extract system, an established in vitro system for the assessment of cellular DNA repair activity. The pre-treatment of intact HeLa cells with BRB extracts (BRBE) enhances the nucleotide excision repair (NER) of a bulky deoxyguanosine adduct derived from the polycyclic aromatic carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene (BP-dG) by ~24%. The NER activity of an oxidatively-derived non-bulky DNA lesion, guanidinohydantoin (Gh), is also enhanced by ~24%, while its base excision repair activity is enhanced by only ~6%. Western Blot experiments indicate that the expression of selected, NER factors is also increased by BRBE treatment by ~73% (XPA), ~55% (XPB), while its effects on XPD was modest (<14%). These results demonstrate that BRBE significantly enhances the NER yields of a bulky and a non-bulky DNA lesion, and that this effect is correlated with an enhancement of expression of the critically important NER factor XPA and the helicase XPB, but not the helicase XPD.
- Published
- 2022
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7. Mechanism of lesion verification by the human XPD helicase in nucleotide excision repair.
- Author
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Fu I, Mu H, Geacintov NE, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- Humans, Adenosine Triphosphatases, DNA Repair, Xeroderma Pigmentosum Group D Protein
- Abstract
In nucleotide excision repair (NER), the xeroderma pigmentosum D helicase (XPD) scans DNA searching for bulky lesions, stalls when encountering such damage to verify its presence, and allows repair to proceed. Structural studies have shown XPD bound to its single-stranded DNA substrate, but molecular and dynamic characterization of how XPD translocates on undamaged DNA and how it stalls to verify lesions remains poorly understood. Here, we have performed extensive all-atom MD simulations of human XPD bound to undamaged and damaged ssDNA, containing a mutagenic pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidone UV photoproduct (6-4PP), near the XPD pore entrance. We characterize how XPD responds to the presence of the DNA lesion, delineating the atomistic-scale mechanism that it utilizes to discriminate between damaged and undamaged nucleotides. We identify key amino acid residues, including FeS residues R112, R196, H135, K128, Arch residues E377 and R380, and ATPase lobe 1 residues 215-221, that are involved in damage verification and show how movements of Arch and ATPase lobe 1 domains relative to the FeS domain modulate these interactions. These structural and dynamic molecular depictions of XPD helicase activity with unmodified DNA and its inhibition by the lesion elucidate how the lesion is verified by inducing XPD stalling., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2022
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8. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal how H3K56 acetylation impacts nucleosome structure to promote DNA exposure for lesion sensing.
- Author
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Fu I, Geacintov NE, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- Acetylation, Humans, DNA Repair, Protein Processing, Post-Translational, Lysine metabolism, Nucleosomes metabolism, Nucleosomes chemistry, Histones metabolism, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, DNA metabolism, DNA chemistry, DNA Damage
- Abstract
The first order of DNA packaging is the nucleosome with the DNA wrapped around the histone octamer. This leaves the nucleosomal DNA with access restrictions, which impose a significant barrier to repair of damaged DNA. The efficiency of DNA repair has been related to nucleosome structure and chromatin status, which is modulated in part by post-translational modifications (PTMs) of histones. Numerous studies have suggested a role for acetylation of lysine at position 56 of the H3 histone (H3K56ac) in various DNA transactions, including the response to DNA damage and its association with human cancer. Biophysical studies have revealed that H3K56ac increases DNA accessibility by facilitating spontaneous and transient unwrapping motions of the DNA ends. However, how this acetylation mark modulates nucleosome structure and dynamics to promote accessibility to the damaged DNA for repair factors and other proteins is still poorly understood. Here, we utilize approximately 5-6 microseconds of atomistic molecular dynamics simulations to delineate the impact of H3K56 acetylation on the nucleosome structure and dynamics, and to elucidate how these nucleosome properties are further impacted when a bulky benzo[a]pyrene-derived DNA lesion is placed near the acetylation site. Our findings reveal that H3K56ac alone induces considerable disturbance to the histone-DNA/histone-histone interactions, and amplifies the distortions imposed by the presence of the lesion. Our work highlights the important role of H3K56 acetylation in response to DNA damage and depicts how access to DNA lesions by the repair machinery can be facilitated within the nucleosome via a key acetylation event., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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9. TENT4A Non-Canonical Poly(A) Polymerase Regulates DNA-Damage Tolerance via Multiple Pathways That Are Mutated in Endometrial Cancer.
- Author
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Swain U, Friedlander G, Sehrawat U, Sarusi-Portuguez A, Rotkopf R, Ebert C, Paz-Elizur T, Dikstein R, Carell T, Geacintov NE, and Livneh Z
- Subjects
- Blotting, Western, Cell Line, Tumor, Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone genetics, Computational Biology, DNA Damage genetics, DNA Damage physiology, DNA Repair genetics, DNA Replication genetics, DNA Replication physiology, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase genetics, Endometrial Neoplasms genetics, Female, HEK293 Cells, Humans, Immunoprecipitation, MCF-7 Cells, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Polynucleotide Adenylyltransferase genetics, RNA Stability genetics, RNA Stability physiology, RNA, Messenger genetics, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases genetics, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases metabolism, Ubiquitination genetics, Ubiquitination physiology, Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone metabolism, DNA Repair physiology, DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase metabolism, Endometrial Neoplasms metabolism, Mutation genetics, Polynucleotide Adenylyltransferase metabolism, RNA, Messenger metabolism
- Abstract
TENT4A (PAPD7) is a non-canonical poly(A) polymerase, of which little is known. Here, we show that TENT4A regulates multiple biological pathways and focuses on its multilayer regulation of translesion DNA synthesis (TLS), in which error-prone DNA polymerases bypass unrepaired DNA lesions. We show that TENT4A regulates mRNA stability and/or translation of DNA polymerase η and RAD18 E3 ligase, which guides the polymerase to replication stalling sites and monoubiquitinates PCNA, thereby enabling recruitment of error-prone DNA polymerases to damaged DNA sites. Remarkably, in addition to the effect on RAD18 mRNA stability via controlling its poly(A) tail, TENT4A indirectly regulates RAD18 via the tumor suppressor CYLD and via the long non-coding antisense RNA PAXIP1-AS2 , which had no known function. Knocking down the expression of TENT4A or CYLD , or overexpression of PAXIP1-AS2 led each to reduced amounts of the RAD18 protein and DNA polymerase η, leading to reduced TLS, highlighting PAXIP1-AS2 as a new TLS regulator. Bioinformatics analysis revealed that TLS error-prone DNA polymerase genes and their TENT4A -related regulators are frequently mutated in endometrial cancer genomes, suggesting that TLS is dysregulated in this cancer.
- Published
- 2021
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10. Recognition and repair of oxidatively generated DNA lesions in plasmid DNA by a facilitated diffusion mechanism.
- Author
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Kolbanovskiy M, Aharonoff A, Sales AH, Geacintov NE, and Shafirovich V
- Subjects
- DNA Glycosylases genetics, HeLa Cells, Humans, Oxidation-Reduction, Plasmids genetics, DNA chemistry, DNA Damage, DNA Glycosylases metabolism, DNA Repair
- Abstract
The oxidatively generated genotoxic spiroiminodihydantoin (Sp) lesions are well-known substrates of the base excision repair (BER) pathway initiated by the bifunctional DNA glycosylase NEIL1. In this work, we reported that the excision kinetics of the single Sp lesions site-specifically embedded in the covalently closed circular DNA plasmids (contour length 2686 base pairs) by NEIL1 are biphasic under single-turnover conditions ([NEIL1] ≫ [SpDNApl]) in contrast with monophasic excision kinetics of the same lesions embedded in147-mer Sp-modified DNA duplexes. Under conditions of a large excess of plasmid DNA base pairs over NEIL1 molecules, the kinetics of excision of Sp lesions are biphasic in nature, exhibiting an initial burst phase, followed by a slower rate of formation of excision products The burst phase is associated with NEIL1-DNA plasmid complexes, while the slow kinetic phase is attributed to the dissociation of non-specific NEIL1-DNA complexes. The amplitude of the burst phase is limited because of the competing non-specific binding of NEIL1 to unmodified DNA sequences flanking the lesion. A numerical analysis of the incision kinetics yielded a value of φ ≍ 0.03 for the fraction of NEIL1 encounters with plasmid molecules that result in the excision of the Sp lesion, and a characteristic dissociation time of non-specific NEIL1-DNA complexes (τ-ns ≍ 8 s). The estimated average DNA translocation distance of NEIL1 is ∼80 base pairs. This estimate suggests that facilitated diffusion enhances the probability that NEIL1 can locate its substrate embedded in an excess of unmodified plasmid DNA nucleotides by a factor of ∼10., (© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Portland Press Limited on behalf of the Biochemical Society.)
- Published
- 2021
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11. Excision of Oxidatively Generated Guanine Lesions by Competitive DNA Repair Pathways.
- Author
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Shafirovich V and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- Free Radicals chemistry, Genetic Vectors, Guanine chemistry, Humans, Oxidation-Reduction, Plasmids genetics, DNA Repair physiology, Guanine metabolism
- Abstract
The base and nucleotide excision repair pathways (BER and NER, respectively) are two major mechanisms that remove DNA lesions formed by the reactions of genotoxic intermediates with cellular DNA. It is generally believed that small non-bulky oxidatively generated DNA base modifications are removed by BER pathways, whereas DNA helix-distorting bulky lesions derived from the attack of chemical carcinogens or UV irradiation are repaired by the NER machinery. However, existing and growing experimental evidence indicates that oxidatively generated DNA lesions can be repaired by competitive BER and NER pathways in human cell extracts and intact human cells. Here, we focus on the interplay and competition of BER and NER pathways in excising oxidatively generated guanine lesions site-specifically positioned in plasmid DNA templates constructed by a gapped-vector technology. These experiments demonstrate a significant enhancement of the NER yields in covalently closed circular DNA plasmids (relative to the same, but linearized form of the same plasmid) harboring certain oxidatively generated guanine lesions. The interplay between the BER and NER pathways that remove oxidatively generated guanine lesions are reviewed and discussed in terms of competitive binding of the BER proteins and the DNA damage-sensing NER factor XPC-RAD23B to these lesions.
- Published
- 2021
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12. Base and Nucleotide Excision Repair Pathways in DNA Plasmids Harboring Oxidatively Generated Guanine Lesions.
- Author
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Kolbanovskiy M, Aharonoff A, Sales AH, Geacintov NE, and Shafirovich V
- Subjects
- DNA chemistry, DNA Repair, Guanine chemistry, HeLa Cells, Humans, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Nucleotides chemistry, Oxidation-Reduction, Plasmids, DNA metabolism, Guanine metabolism, Nucleotides metabolism
- Abstract
The base and nucleotide excision repair pathways (BER and NER, respectively) are two major mechanisms that remove DNA lesions formed by the reactions of genotoxic intermediates with cellular DNA. We have demonstrated earlier that the oxidatively generated guanine lesions spiroiminodihydantoin (Sp) and 5-guanidinohydantoin (Gh) are excised from double-stranded DNA by competing BER and NER in whole-cell extracts [Shafirovich, V., et al. (2016) J. Biol. Chem . 321 , 5309-5319]. In this work we compared the NER and BER yields with single Gh or Sp lesions embedded at the same sites in covalently closed circular pUC19NN plasmid DNA (cccDNA) and in the same but linearized form (linDNA) of this plasmid. The kinetics of the Sp and Gh BER and NER incisions were monitored in HeLa cell extracts. The yield of NER products is ∼5 times greater in covalently closed circular DNA than in the linearized form, while the BER yield is smaller by ∼20-30% depending on the guanine lesion. Control BER experiments with 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG) show that the BER yield is increased by a factor of only 1.4 ± 0.2 in cccDNA relative to linDNA. These surprising differences in BER and NER activities are discussed in terms of the lack of termini in covalently closed circular DNA and the DNA lesion search dynamics of the NER DNA damage sensor XPC-RAD23B and the BER enzyme OGG1 that recognizes and excises 8-oxoG.
- Published
- 2021
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13. The DNA damage-sensing NER repair factor XPC-RAD23B does not recognize bulky DNA lesions with a missing nucleotide opposite the lesion.
- Author
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Feher KM, Kolbanovskiy A, Durandin A, Shim Y, Min JH, Lee YC, Shafirovich V, Mu H, Broyde S, and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- 7,8-Dihydro-7,8-dihydroxybenzo(a)pyrene 9,10-oxide chemistry, DNA chemistry, DNA metabolism, DNA Adducts chemistry, DNA Repair Enzymes metabolism, DNA-Binding Proteins chemistry, Humans, Kinetics, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Protein Conformation, Saccharomyces cerevisiae enzymology, Saccharomyces cerevisiae genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins chemistry, Substrate Specificity, 7,8-Dihydro-7,8-dihydroxybenzo(a)pyrene 9,10-oxide metabolism, DNA Adducts metabolism, DNA Repair, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
The Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER) mechanism removes a wide spectrum of structurally different lesions that critically depend on the binding of the DNA damage sensing NER factor XPC-RAD23B (XPC) to the lesions. The bulky mutagenic benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide metabolite-derived cis- and trans-B[a]P-dG lesions (G*) adopt base-displaced intercalative (cis) or minor groove (trans) conformations in fully paired DNA duplexes with the canonical C opposite G* (G*:C duplexes). While XPC has a high affinity for binding to these DNA lesions in fully complementary double-stranded DNA, we show here that deleting only the C in the complementary strand opposite the lesion G* embedded in 50-mer duplexes, fully abrogates XPC binding. Accurate values of XPC dissociation constants (K
D ) were determined by employing an excess of unmodified DNA as a competitor; this approach eliminated the binding and accumulation of multiple XPC molecules to the same DNA duplexes, a phenomenon that prevented the accurate estimation of XPC binding affinities in previous studies. Surprisingly, a detailed comparison of XPC dissociation constants KD of unmodified and lesion-containing G*:Del complexes, showed that the KD values were -2.5-3.6 times greater in the case of G*:Del than in the unmodified G:Del and fully base-paired G:C duplexes. The origins of this unexpected XPC lesion avoidance effect is attributed to the intercalation of the bulky, planar B[a]P aromatic ring system between adjacent DNA bases that thermodynamically stabilize the G*:Del duplexes. The strong lesion-base stacking interactions associated with the absence of the partner base, prevent the DNA structural distortions needed for the binding of the BHD2 and BHD3 β-hairpins of XPC to the deletion duplexes, thus accounting for the loss of XPC binding and the known NER-resistance of G*:Del duplexes., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.)- Published
- 2020
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14. Remarkable Enhancement of Nucleotide Excision Repair of a Bulky Guanine Lesion in a Covalently Closed Circular DNA Plasmid Relative to the Same Linearized Plasmid.
- Author
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Kolbanovskiy M, Aharonoff A, Sales AH, Geacintov NE, and Shafirovich V
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, DNA Repair, DNA, Circular chemistry, DNA, Circular genetics, Guanine, Plasmids genetics
- Abstract
The excision of DNA lesions by human nucleotide excision repair (NER) has been extensively studied in human cell extracts. Employing DNA duplexes with fewer than 200 bp containing a single bulky, benzo[ a ]pyrene-derived guanine lesion (B[ a ]P-dG), the NER yields are typically on the order of ∼5-10%, or less. Remarkably, the NER yield is enhanced by a factor of ∼6 when the B[ a ]P-dG lesion is embedded in a covalently closed circular pUC19NN plasmid (contour length of 2686 bp) rather than in the same plasmid linearized by a restriction enzyme with the B[ a ]P-dG adduct positioned at the 945th nucleotide counted from the 5'-end of the linearized DNA molecules. Furthermore, the NER yield in the circular pUC19NN plasmid is ∼9 times greater than in a short 147-mer DNA duplex with the B[ a ]P-dG adduct positioned in the middle. Although the NER factors responsible for these differences were not explicitly identified here, we hypothesize that the initial DNA damage sensor XPC-RAD23B is a likely candidate; it is known to search for DNA lesions by a constrained one-dimensional search mechanism [Cheon, N. Y., et al. (2019) Nucleic Acids Res . 47 , 8337-8347], and our results are consistent with the notion that it dissociates more readily from the blunt ends than from the inner regions of linear DNA duplexes, thus accounting for the remarkable enhancement in NER yields associated with the single B[ a ]P-dG adduct embedded in covalently closed circular plasmids.
- Published
- 2020
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15. Inhibition of Excision of Oxidatively Generated Hydantoin DNA Lesions by NEIL1 by the Competitive Binding of the Nucleotide Excision Repair Factor XPC-RAD23B.
- Author
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Kolbanovskiy M, Shim Y, Min JH, Geacintov NE, and Shafirovich V
- Subjects
- Binding, Competitive, DNA drug effects, DNA Repair, Humans, Hydantoins pharmacology, Molecular Conformation, Oxidation-Reduction, DNA metabolism, DNA Glycosylases metabolism, DNA Repair Enzymes metabolism, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Hydantoins metabolism
- Abstract
The interplay between nucleotide excision repair (NER) and base excision repair (BER) of nonbulky, oxidatively generated DNA lesions has long been a subject of significant interest. The hydantoin oxidation products of 8-oxoguanine, spiroiminodihydantoin (Sp) and 5-guanidinohydantoin (Gh), are substrates of both BER and NER in HeLa cell extracts and human cells [Shafirovich, V., et al. (2019) Chem. Res. Toxicol. 32 , 753-761]. The primary factor that recognizes DNA lesions is the DNA damage-sensing factor XPC-RAD23B (XPC), while the glycosylase NEIL1 is known to remove Gh and Sp lesions from double-stranded DNA. It is shown here that in aqueous solutions containing nanomolar concentrations of proteins, XPC and NEIL1 compete for binding to 147-mer oligonucleotide duplexes that contain single Gh or Sp lesions under conditions of [protein] ≫ [DNA], thus inhibiting the rate of BER catalyzed by NEIL1. The non-covalently bound NEIL1 molecules can be displaced by XPC at concentration ratios R = [XPC]/[NEIL1] > 0.2, while full displacement of NEIL1 is observed at R ≥ 0.5. In the absence of XPC and under single-turnover conditions, only the burst phase is observable. However, with a progressive increase in the XPC concentration, the amplitude of the burst phase decreases gradually, and a slower time-dependent phase of incision product formation manifests itself with rate constants of 3.0 × 10
-3 s-1 (Gh) and 0.90 × 10-3 s-1 (Sp). These slow kinetics are attributed to the dissociation of XPC-DNA complexes that allow for the rebinding of NEIL1 to the temporarily exposed Gh or Sp lesions, and the incisions observed under these steady-state conditions.- Published
- 2020
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16. Variable impact of conformationally distinct DNA lesions on nucleosome structure and dynamics: Implications for nucleotide excision repair.
- Author
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Cai Y, Geacintov NE, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- Acetylation, Benzo(a)pyrene metabolism, Deoxyguanosine metabolism, Histones, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Protein Processing, Post-Translational, DNA Damage, DNA Repair, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Nucleosomes chemistry, Nucleosomes genetics
- Abstract
The packaging of DNA in nucleosomes presents a barrier for biological transactions including replication, transcription and repair. However, despite years of research, how the DNA is freed from the histone proteins and thereby allows the molecular machines to access the DNA remains poorly understood. We are interested in global genomic nucleotide excision repair (GG-NER). It is established that the histones are obstacles to this process, and DNA lesions are repaired less efficiently in nucleosomes than in free DNA. In the present study, we utilized molecular dynamics simulations to elucidate the nature of the distortions and dynamics imposed in the nucleosome by a set of three structually different lesions that vary in GG-NER efficiencies in free DNA, and in nucleosomes [Shafirovich, Geacintov, et. al, 2019]. Two of these are bulky lesions derived from metabolic activation of the environmental carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene, the 10R (+)-cis-anti-B[a]P-N
2 -dG and the stereoisomeric 10S (+)-trans-anti-B[a]P-N2 -dG, which respectively adopt base-displaced/intercalated and minor groove-aligned conformations in DNA. The third is a non-bulky lesion, the 5'R-8-cyclo-2'-deoxyguanosine cross-link, produced by reactive oxygen and nitrogen species; cyclopurine lesions are highly mutagenic. These adducts are placed near the dyad axis, and rotationally with the lesion-containing strand facing towards or away from the histones. While each lesion has distinct conformational characteristics that are retained in the nucleosome, a spectrum of structural and dynamic disturbances, from slight to substantial, are displayed that depend on the lesion's structure and position in the nucleosome. We hypothesize that these intrinsic structural and dynamic distinctions provide different signals to initiate the cascade of chromatin-opening processes, including acetylation and other post translational modifications, remodeling by ATP-dependent complexes and spontaneous unwrapping that regulate the rate of access to the lesion; this may translate ultimately into varying GG-NER efficiencies, including repair resistance when signals for access are too weak., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no competing financial interest., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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17. 5-Formylcytosine-induced DNA-peptide cross-links reduce transcription efficiency, but do not cause transcription errors in human cells.
- Author
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Ji S, Park D, Kropachev K, Kolbanovskiy M, Fu I, Broyde S, Essawy M, Geacintov NE, and Tretyakova NY
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Cross-Linking Reagents chemistry, Cytosine chemistry, Cytosine metabolism, DNA chemistry, DNA genetics, DNA Breaks, Double-Stranded, DNA Repair, HEK293 Cells, HeLa Cells, Humans, Peptides chemistry, Cytosine analogs & derivatives, DNA metabolism, DNA Replication genetics, Peptides metabolism, Transcription, Genetic
- Abstract
5-Formylcytosine (5fC) is an endogenous epigenetic DNA mark introduced via enzymatic oxidation of 5-methyl-dC in DNA. We and others recently reported that 5fC can form reversible DNA-protein conjugates with histone proteins, likely contributing to regulation of nucleosomal organization and gene expression. The protein component of DNA-protein cross-links can be proteolytically degraded, resulting in smaller DNA-peptide cross-links. Unlike full-size DNA-protein cross-links that completely block replication and transcription, DNA-peptide cross-links can be bypassed by DNA and RNA polymerases and can potentially be repaired via the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway. In the present work, we constructed plasmid molecules containing reductively stabilized, site-specific 5fC-polypeptide lesions and employed a quantitative MS-based assay to assess their effects on transcription in cells. Our results revealed that the presence of DNA-peptide cross-link significantly inhibits transcription in human HEK293T cells but does not induce transcription errors. Furthermore, transcription efficiency was similar in WT and NER-deficient human cell lines, suggesting that the 5fC-polypeptide lesion is a weak substrate for NER. This finding was confirmed by in vitro NER assays in cell-free extracts from human HeLa cells, suggesting that another mechanism is required for 5fC-polypeptide lesion removal. In summary, our findings indicate that 5fC-mediated DNA-peptide cross-links dramatically reduce transcription efficiency, are poor NER substrates, and do not cause transcription errors., (© 2019 Ji et al.)
- Published
- 2019
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18. 5',8-Cyclopurine Lesions in DNA Damage: Chemical, Analytical, Biological, and Diagnostic Significance.
- Author
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Chatgilialoglu C, Ferreri C, Geacintov NE, Krokidis MG, Liu Y, Masi A, Shafirovich V, Terzidis MA, and Tsegay PS
- Subjects
- Animals, DNA Repair, Humans, Oligonucleotides chemical synthesis, Oligonucleotides chemistry, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Small Molecule Libraries, DNA Damage, Purines chemistry, Purines metabolism
- Abstract
Purine 5',8-cyclo-2'-deoxynucleosides (cPu) are tandem-type lesions observed among the DNA purine modifications and identified in mammalian cellular DNA in vivo. These lesions can be present in two diasteroisomeric forms, 5' R and 5' S , for each 2'-deoxyadenosine and 2'-deoxyguanosine moiety. They are generated exclusively by hydroxyl radical attack to 2'-deoxyribose units generating C5' radicals, followed by cyclization with the C8 position of the purine base. This review describes the main recent achievements in the preparation of the cPu molecular library for analytical and DNA synthesis applications for the studies of the enzymatic recognition and repair mechanisms, their impact on transcription and genetic instability, quantitative determination of the levels of lesions in various types of cells and animal model systems, and relationships between the levels of lesions and human health, disease, and aging, as well as the defining of the detection limits and quantification protocols., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2019
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19. Excision of Oxidatively Generated Guanine Lesions by Competing Base and Nucleotide Excision Repair Mechanisms in Human Cells.
- Author
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Shafirovich V, Kropachev K, Kolbanovskiy M, and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- Cells, Cultured, DNA Repair, Fibroblasts metabolism, Guanine chemistry, HeLa Cells, Humans, Kinetics, Molecular Structure, Oxidation-Reduction, Guanine metabolism
- Abstract
The interchange between different repair mechanisms in human cells has long been a subject of interest. Here, we provide a direct demonstration that the oxidatively generated guanine lesions spiroiminodihydantoin (Sp) and 5-guanidinohydantoin (Gh) embedded in double-stranded DNA are substrates of both base excision repair (BER) and nucleotide excision repair (NER) mechanisms in intact human cells. Site-specifically modified,
32 P-internally labeled double-stranded DNA substrates were transfected into fibroblasts or HeLa cells, and the BER and/or NER mono- and dual incision products were quantitatively recovered after 2-8 h incubation periods and lysis of the cells. DNA duplexes bearing single benzo[ a]pyrene-derived guanine adduct were employed as positive controls of NER. The NER activities, but not the BER activities, were abolished in XPA-/- cells, while the BER yields were strongly reduced in NEIL1-/- cells. Co-transfecting different concentrations of analogous DNA sequences bearing the BER substrates 5-hydroxyuracil diminish the BER yields of Sp lesions and enhance the yields of NER products. These results are consistent with a model based on the local availability of BER and NER factors in human cells and their competitive binding to the same Sp or Gh BER/NER substrates.- Published
- 2019
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20. Nucleotide Excision Repair and Impact of Site-Specific 5',8-Cyclopurine and Bulky DNA Lesions on the Physical Properties of Nucleosomes.
- Author
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Shafirovich V, Kolbanovskiy M, Kropachev K, Liu Z, Cai Y, Terzidis MA, Masi A, Chatgilialoglu C, Amin S, Dadali A, Broyde S, and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- DNA Adducts genetics, DNA Repair Enzymes metabolism, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, HeLa Cells, Humans, Nucleosomes genetics, DNA chemistry, DNA Adducts chemistry, DNA Damage, DNA Repair, Nucleosomes chemistry, Purines chemistry
- Abstract
The nonbulky 5',8-cyclopurine DNA lesions (cP) and the bulky, benzo[ a]pyrene diol epoxide-derived stereoisomeric cis- and trans- N
2 -guanine adducts (BPDE-dG) are good substrates of the human nucleotide excision repair (NER) mechanism. These DNA lesions were embedded at the In or Out rotational settings near the dyad axis in nucleosome core particles reconstituted either with native histones extracted from HeLa cells (HeLa-NCP) or with recombinant histones (Rec-NCP). The cP lesions are completely resistant to NER in human HeLa cell extracts. The BPDE-dG adducts are also NER-resistant in Rec-NCPs but are good substrates of NER in HeLa-NCPs. The four BPDE-dG adduct samples are excised with different efficiencies in free DNA, but in HeLa-NCPs, the efficiencies are reduced by a common factor of 2.2 ± 0.2 relative to the NER efficiencies in free DNA. The NER response of the BPDE-dG adducts in HeLa-NCPs is not directly correlated with the observed differences in the thermodynamic destabilization of HeLa-NCPs, the Förster resonance energy transfer values, or hydroxyl radical footprint patterns and is weakly dependent on the rotational settings. These and other observations suggest that NER is initiated by the binding of the DNA damage-sensing NER factor XPC-RAD23B to a transiently opened BPDE-modified DNA sequence that corresponds to the known footprint of XPC-DNA-RAD23B complexes (≥30 bp). These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that post-translational modifications and the dimensions and properties of the DNA lesions are the major factors that have an impact on the dynamics and initiation of NER in nucleosomes.- Published
- 2019
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21. Generation of 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine in G-Quadruplexes Models of Human Telomere Sequences by One-electron Oxidation.
- Author
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Merta TJ, Geacintov NE, and Shafirovich V
- Subjects
- Guanine chemistry, Humans, Kinetics, Oxidation-Reduction, G-Quadruplexes, Guanine analogs & derivatives, Models, Chemical, Telomere
- Abstract
The mechanistic aspects of one-electron oxidation of G-quadruplexes in the basket (Na
+ ions) and hybrid (K+ ions) conformations were investigated by transient absorption laser kinetic spectroscopy and HPLC detection of the 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG) oxidation product. The photo-induced one-electron abstraction from G-quadruplexes was initiated by sulfate radical anions (SO4 ˙- ) derived from the photolysis of persulfate ions by 308 nm excimer laser pulses. In neutral aqueous solutions (pH 7.0), the transient absorbance of neutral guanine radicals, G(-H)˙, is observed following the complete decay of SO4 ˙- radicals (~10 μs after the actinic laser flash). In both basket and hybrid conformations, the G(-H)˙ decay is biphasic with one component decaying with a lifetime of ~0.1 ms, and the other with a lifetime of 20-30 ms. The fast decay component (~0.1 ms) in G-quadruplexes is correlated with the formation of 8-oxoG lesions. We propose that in G-quadruplexes, G(-H)˙ radicals retain radical cation character by sharing the N1-proton with the O6 -atom of G in the [G˙+ : G] Hoogsteen base pair; this [G(-H)˙: H+ G ⇄ G˙+ : G] leads to the hydration of G˙+ radical cation within the millisecond time domain, and is followed by the formation of the 8-oxoG lesions., (© 2018 The American Society of Photobiology.)- Published
- 2019
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22. Aberrant repair initiated by the adenine-DNA glycosylase does not play a role in UV-induced mutagenesis in Escherichia coli .
- Author
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Zutterling C, Mursalimov A, Talhaoui I, Koshenov Z, Akishev Z, Bissenbaev AK, Mazon G, Geacintov NE, Gasparutto D, Groisman R, Zharkov DO, Matkarimov BT, and Saparbaev M
- Abstract
Background: DNA repair is essential to counteract damage to DNA induced by endo- and exogenous factors, to maintain genome stability. However, challenges to the faithful discrimination between damaged and non-damaged DNA strands do exist, such as mismatched pairs between two regular bases resulting from spontaneous deamination of 5-methylcytosine or DNA polymerase errors during replication. To counteract these mutagenic threats to genome stability, cells evolved the mismatch-specific DNA glycosylases that can recognize and remove regular DNA bases in the mismatched DNA duplexes. The Escherichia coli adenine-DNA glycosylase (MutY/MicA) protects cells against oxidative stress-induced mutagenesis by removing adenine which is mispaired with 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8oxoG) in the base excision repair pathway. However, MutY does not discriminate between template and newly synthesized DNA strands. Therefore the ability to remove A from 8oxoG•A mispair, which is generated via misincorporation of an 8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine-5'-triphosphate precursor during DNA replication and in which A is the template base, can induce A•T→C•G transversions. Furthermore, it has been demonstrated that human MUTYH, homologous to the bacterial MutY, might be involved in the aberrant processing of ultraviolet (UV) induced DNA damage., Methods: Here, we investigated the role of MutY in UV-induced mutagenesis in E. coli . MutY was probed on DNA duplexes containing cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) and pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidone photoproduct (6-4PP). UV irradiation of E. coli induces Save Our Souls (SOS) response characterized by increased production of DNA repair enzymes and mutagenesis. To study the role of MutY in vivo, the mutation frequencies to rifampicin-resistant (Rif
R ) after UV irradiation of wild type and mutant E. coli strains were measured., Results: We demonstrated that MutY does not excise Adenine when it is paired with CPD and 6-4PP adducts in duplex DNA. At the same time, MutY excises Adenine in A•G and A•8oxoG mispairs. Interestingly, E. coli mutY strains, which have elevated spontaneous mutation rate, exhibited low mutational induction after UV exposure as compared to MutY-proficient strains. However, sequence analysis of RifR mutants revealed that the frequencies of C→T transitions dramatically increased after UV irradiation in both MutY-proficient and -deficient E. coli strains., Discussion: These findings indicate that the bacterial MutY is not involved in the aberrant DNA repair of UV-induced DNA damage., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests.- Published
- 2018
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23. Lesion Sensing during Initial Binding by Yeast XPC/Rad4: Toward Predicting Resistance to Nucleotide Excision Repair.
- Author
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Mu H, Zhang Y, Geacintov NE, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- Benzo(a)pyrene chemistry, Benzo(a)pyrene metabolism, Binding Sites, DNA chemistry, DNA metabolism, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Isomerism, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Protein Binding, Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins metabolism, DNA Repair, DNA-Binding Proteins chemistry, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins chemistry
- Abstract
Nucleotide excision repair (NER) excises a variety of environmentally derived DNA lesions. However, NER efficiencies for structurally different DNA lesions can vary by orders of magnitude; yet the origin of this variance is poorly understood. Our goal is to develop computational strategies that predict and identify the most hazardous, repair-resistant lesions from the plethora of such adducts. In the present work, we are focusing on lesion recognition by the xeroderma pigmentosum C protein complex (XPC), the first and required step for the subsequent assembly of factors needed to produce successful NER. We have performed molecular dynamics simulations to characterize the initial binding of Rad4, the yeast orthologue of human XPC, to a library of 10 different lesion-containing DNA duplexes derived from environmental carcinogens. These vary in lesion chemical structures and conformations in duplex DNA and exhibit a wide range of relative NER efficiencies from repair resistant to highly susceptible. We have determined a promising set of structural descriptors that characterize initial binding of Rad4 to lesions that are resistant to NER. Key initial binding requirements for successful recognition are absent in the repair-resistant cases: There is little or no duplex unwinding, very limited interaction between the β-hairpin domain 2 of Rad4 and the minor groove of the lesion-containing duplex, and no conformational capture of a base on the lesion partner strand. By contrast, these key binding features are present to different degrees in NER susceptible lesions and correlate to their relative NER efficiencies. Furthermore, we have gained molecular understanding of Rad4 initial binding as determined by the lesion structures in duplex DNA and how the initial binding relates to the repair efficiencies. The development of a computational strategy for identifying NER-resistant lesions is grounded in this molecular understanding of the lesion recognition mechanism.
- Published
- 2018
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24. Molecular basis for damage recognition and verification by XPC-RAD23B and TFIIH in nucleotide excision repair.
- Author
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Mu H, Geacintov NE, Broyde S, Yeo JE, and Schärer OD
- Subjects
- DNA metabolism, DNA Adducts metabolism, Humans, Yeasts genetics, Yeasts metabolism, DNA Damage, DNA Repair, DNA Repair Enzymes metabolism, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Transcription Factor TFIIH metabolism
- Abstract
Global genome nucleotide excision repair (GG-NER) is the main pathway for the removal of bulky lesions from DNA and is characterized by an extraordinarily wide substrate specificity. Remarkably, the efficiency of lesion removal varies dramatically and certain lesions escape repair altogether and are therefore associated with high levels of mutagenicity. Central to the multistep mechanism of damage recognition in NER is the sensing of lesion-induced thermodynamic and structural alterations of DNA by the XPC-RAD23B protein and the verification of the damage by the transcription/repair factor TFIIH. Additional factors contribute to the process: UV-DDB, for the recognition of certain UV-induced lesions in particular in the context of chromatin, while the XPA protein is believed to have a role in damage verification and NER complex assembly. Here we consider the molecular mechanisms that determine repair efficiency in GG-NER based on recent structural, computational, biochemical, cellular and single molecule studies of XPC-RAD23B and its yeast ortholog Rad4. We discuss how the actions of XPC-RAD23B are integrated with those of other NER proteins and, based on recent high-resolution structures of TFIIH, present a structural model of how XPC-RAD23B and TFIIH cooperate in damage recognition and verification., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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25. Synergistic effects of H3 and H4 nucleosome tails on structure and dynamics of a lesion-containing DNA: Binding of a displaced lesion partner base to the H3 tail for GG-NER recognition.
- Author
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Cai Y, Fu I, Geacintov NE, Zhang Y, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- Acetylation, Benzo(a)pyrene, DNA chemistry, DNA Adducts, Humans, Protein Processing, Post-Translational, DNA metabolism, DNA Repair, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Histones metabolism, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Nucleic Acid Conformation
- Abstract
How DNA lesions in nucleosomes are recognized for global genome nucleotide excision repair (GG-NER) remains poorly understood, and the roles that histone tails may play remains to be established. Histone H3 and H4 N-terminal tails are of particular interest as their acetylation states are important in regulating nucleosomal functions in transcription, replication and repair. In particular the H3 tail has been the focus of recent attention as a site for the interaction with XPC, the GG-NER lesion recognition factor. Here we have investigated how the structure and dynamics of the DNA lesion cis-B[a]P-dG, derived from the environmental carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P), is impacted by the presence of flanking H3 and H4 tails. This lesion is well-repaired by GG-NER, and adopts a base-displaced/intercalated conformation in which the lesion partner C is displaced into the major groove. We used molecular dynamics simulations to obtain structural and dynamic characterizations for this lesion positioned in nucleosomal DNA so that it is bracketed by the H3 and H4 tails. The H4 tail was studied in unacetylated and acetylated states, while the H3 tail was unacetylated, its state when it binds XPC (Kakumu, Nakanishi et al., 2017). Our results reveal that upon acetylation, the H4 tail is released from the DNA surface; the H3 tail then forms a pocket that induces flipping and capture of the displaced lesion partner base C. This reveals synergistic effects of the behavior of the two tails. We hypothesize that the dual capability of the H3 tail to sense the displaced lesion partner base and to bind XPC could foster recognition of this lesion by XPC for initiation of GG-NER in nucleosomes., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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26. Mechanism of error-free replication across benzo[a]pyrene stereoisomers by Rev1 DNA polymerase.
- Author
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Rechkoblit O, Kolbanovskiy A, Landes H, Geacintov NE, and Aggarwal AK
- Subjects
- Catalytic Domain, Crystallography, X-Ray, DNA Adducts chemistry, DNA Repair physiology, DNA Replication, Guanine chemistry, Metals chemistry, Metals metabolism, Oligonucleotides chemistry, Oligonucleotides metabolism, Protein Conformation, Stereoisomerism, Benzo(a)pyrene chemistry, Benzo(a)pyrene metabolism, Nucleotidyltransferases chemistry, Nucleotidyltransferases metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins chemistry, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Benzo[a]pyrene (BP) is a carcinogen in cigarette smoke which, after metabolic activation, can react with the exocyclic N
2 amino group of guanine to generate four stereoisomeric BP-N2 -dG adducts. Rev1 is unique among translesion synthesis DNA polymerases in employing a protein-template-directed mechanism of DNA synthesis opposite undamaged and damaged guanine. Here we report high-resolution structures of yeast Rev1 with three BP-N2 -dG adducts, namely the 10S (+)-trans-BP-N2 -dG, 10R (+)-cis-BP-N2 -dG, and 10S ( - )-cis-BP-N2 -dG. Surprisingly, in all three structures, the bulky and hydrophobic BP pyrenyl residue is entirely solvent-exposed in the major groove of the DNA. This is very different from the adduct alignments hitherto observed in free or protein-bound DNA. All complexes are well poised for dCTP insertion. Our structures provide a view of cis-BP-N2 -dG adducts in a DNA polymerase active site, and offer a basis for understanding error-free replication of the BP-derived stereoisomeric guanine adducts.Benzo[a]pyrene (BP) is a carcinogen in cigarette smoke that upon metabolic activation reacts with guanine. Here, the authors present the structures of the translesion DNA synthesis polymerase Rev1 in complex with three of the four possible stereoisomeric BP-N2 -dG adducts, which gives insights how Rev1 achieves error-free replication.- Published
- 2017
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27. Repair-Resistant DNA Lesions.
- Author
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Geacintov NE and Broyde S
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Pairing, DNA metabolism, DNA Adducts chemistry, DNA Adducts metabolism, DNA Damage, Humans, Stereoisomerism, DNA chemistry, DNA Repair, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons chemistry
- Abstract
The eukaryotic global genomic nucleotide excision repair (GG-NER) pathway is the major mechanism that removes most bulky and some nonbulky lesions from cellular DNA. There is growing evidence that certain DNA lesions are repaired slowly or are entirely resistant to repair in cells, tissues, and in cell extract model assay systems. It is well established that the eukaryotic DNA lesion-sensing proteins do not detect the damaged nucleotide, but recognize the distortions/destabilizations in the native DNA structure caused by the damaged nucleotides. In this article, the nature of the structural features of certain bulky DNA lesions that render them resistant to NER, or cause them to be repaired slowly, is compared to that of those that are good-to-excellent NER substrates. Understanding the structural features that distinguish NER-resistant DNA lesions from good NER substrates may be useful for interpreting the biological significance of biomarkers of exposure of human populations to genotoxic environmental chemicals. NER-resistant lesions can survive to replication and cause mutations that can initiate cancer and other diseases. Furthermore, NER diminishes the efficacy of certain chemotherapeutic drugs, and the design of more potent pharmaceuticals that resist repair can be advanced through a better understanding of the structural properties of DNA lesions that engender repair-resistance.
- Published
- 2017
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28. The Nonbulky DNA Lesions Spiroiminodihydantoin and 5-Guanidinohydantoin Significantly Block Human RNA Polymerase II Elongation in Vitro.
- Author
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Kolbanovskiy M, Chowdhury MA, Nadkarni A, Broyde S, Geacintov NE, Scicchitano DA, and Shafirovich V
- Subjects
- DNA Damage, DNA Repair, Guanidines chemical synthesis, Guanidines chemistry, Guanosine chemical synthesis, Guanosine chemistry, Guanosine pharmacology, HeLa Cells, Humans, Hydantoins chemical synthesis, Hydantoins chemistry, Molecular Conformation, RNA Polymerase II genetics, RNA Polymerase II metabolism, Spiro Compounds chemical synthesis, Spiro Compounds chemistry, Structure-Activity Relationship, Guanidines pharmacology, Guanosine analogs & derivatives, Hydantoins pharmacology, RNA Polymerase II antagonists & inhibitors, Spiro Compounds pharmacology, Transcription Elongation, Genetic drug effects
- Abstract
The most common, oxidatively generated lesion in cellular DNA is 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine, which can be oxidized further to yield highly mutagenic spiroiminodihydantoin (Sp) and 5-guanidinohydantoin (Gh) in DNA. In human cell-free extracts, both lesions can be excised by base excision repair and global genomic nucleotide excision repair. However, it is not known if these lesions can be removed by transcription-coupled DNA repair (TCR), a pathway that clears lesions from DNA that impede RNA synthesis. To determine if Sp or Gh impedes transcription, which could make each a viable substrate for TCR, either an Sp or a Gh lesion was positioned on the transcribed strand of DNA under the control of a promoter that supports transcription by human RNA polymerase II. These constructs were incubated in HeLa nuclear extracts that contained active RNA polymerase II, and the resulting transcripts were resolved by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The structurally rigid Sp strongly blocks transcription elongation, permitting 1.6 ± 0.5% nominal lesion bypass. In contrast, the conformationally flexible Gh poses less of a block to human RNAPII, allowing 9 ± 2% bypass. Furthermore, fractional lesion bypass for Sp and Gh is minimally affected by glycosylase activity found in the HeLa nuclear extract. These data specifically suggest that both Sp and Gh may well be susceptible to TCR because each poses a significant block to human RNA polymerase II progression. A more general principle is also proposed: Conformational flexibility may be an important structural feature of DNA lesions that enhances their transcriptional bypass.
- Published
- 2017
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29. Nucleotide Excision Repair Lesion-Recognition Protein Rad4 Captures a Pre-Flipped Partner Base in a Benzo[a]pyrene-Derived DNA Lesion: How Structure Impacts the Binding Pathway.
- Author
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Mu H, Geacintov NE, Min JH, Zhang Y, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Models, Molecular, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Protein Binding, Benzo(a)pyrene chemistry, DNA chemistry, DNA metabolism, DNA Damage, DNA Repair, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
The xeroderma pigmentosum C protein complex (XPC) recognizes a variety of environmentally induced DNA lesions and is the key in initiating their repair by the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway. When bound to a lesion, XPC flips two nucleotide pairs that include the lesion out of the DNA duplex, yielding a productively bound complex that can lead to successful lesion excision. Interestingly, the efficiencies of NER vary greatly among different lesions, influencing their toxicity and mutagenicity in cells. Though differences in XPC binding may influence NER efficiency, it is not understood whether XPC utilizes different mechanisms to achieve productive binding with different lesions. Here, we investigated the well-repaired 10R-(+)-cis-anti-benzo[a]pyrene-N
2 -dG (cis-B[a]P-dG) DNA adduct in a duplex containing normal partner C opposite the lesion. This adduct is derived from the environmental pro-carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene and is likely to be encountered by NER in the cell. We have extensively investigated its binding to the yeast XPC orthologue, Rad4, using umbrella sampling with restrained molecular dynamics simulations and free energy calculations. The NMR solution structure of this lesion in duplex DNA has shown that the dC complementary to the adducted dG is flipped out of the DNA duplex in the absence of XPC. However, it is not known whether the "pre-flipped" base would play a role in its recognition by XPC. Our results show that Rad4 first captures the displaced dC, which is followed by a tightly coupled lesion-extruding pathway for productive binding. This binding path differs significantly from the one deduced for the small cis-syn cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer lesion opposite mismatched thymines [ Mu , H. , ( 2015 ) Biochemistry , 54 ( 34 ), 5263 - 7 ]. The possibility of multiple paths that lead to productive binding to XPC is consistent with the versatile lesion recognition by XPC that is required for successful NER.- Published
- 2017
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30. Removal of oxidatively generated DNA damage by overlapping repair pathways.
- Author
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Shafirovich V and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- DNA, B-Form metabolism, Guanidines, Humans, Hydantoins, Nitroimidazoles, Oxidation-Reduction, Substrate Specificity, DNA Damage, DNA Glycosylases metabolism, DNA Repair, DNA, B-Form chemistry, Oxidative Stress
- Abstract
It is generally believed that the mammalian nucleotide excision repair pathway removes DNA helix-distorting bulky DNA lesions, while small non-bulky lesions are repaired by base excision repair (BER). However, recent work demonstrates that the oxidativly generated guanine oxidation products, spiroimininodihydantoin (Sp), 5-guanidinohydantoin (Gh), and certain intrastrand cross-linked lesions, are good substrates of NER and BER pathways that compete with one another in human cell extracts. The oxidation of guanine by peroxynitrite is known to generate 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole (NIm) which is structurally similar to Gh, except that the 4-nitro group in NIm is replaced by a keto group in Gh. However, unlike Gh, NIm is an excellent substrate of BER, but not of NER. These and other related results are reviewed and discussed in this article., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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31. Nucleosome Histone Tail Conformation and Dynamics: Impacts of Lysine Acetylation and a Nearby Minor Groove Benzo[a]pyrene-Derived Lesion.
- Author
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Fu I, Cai Y, Geacintov NE, Zhang Y, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- Acetylation, Amino Acid Sequence, DNA metabolism, DNA Damage, Histones metabolism, Histones ultrastructure, Lysine chemistry, Lysine metabolism, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Nucleosomes metabolism, Nucleosomes ultrastructure, Protein Binding, Protein Domains, Protein Multimerization, Protein Structure, Secondary, Benzo(a)pyrene chemistry, DNA chemistry, DNA Repair, Histones chemistry, Nucleosomes chemistry, Protein Processing, Post-Translational
- Abstract
Histone tails in nucleosomes play critical roles in regulation of many biological processes, including chromatin compaction, transcription, and DNA repair. Moreover, post-translational modifications, notably lysine acetylation, are crucial to these functions. While the tails have been intensively studied, how the structures and dynamics of tails are impacted by the presence of a nearby bulky DNA lesion is a frontier research area, and how these properties are impacted by tail lysine acetylation remains unexplored. To obtain molecular insight, we have utilized all atom 3 μs molecular dynamics simulations of nucleosome core particles (NCPs) to determine the impact of a nearby DNA lesion, 10S (+)-trans-anti-B[a]P-N
2 -dG-the major adduct derived from the procarcinogen benzo[a]pyrene-on H2B tail behavior in unacetylated and acetylated states. We similarly studied lesion-free NCPs to investigate the normal properties of the H2B tail in both states. In the lesion-free NCPs, charge neutralization upon lysine acetylation causes release of the tail from the DNA. When the lesion is present, it stably engulfs part of the nearby tail, impairing the interactions between DNA and tail. With the tail in an acetylated state, the lesion still interacts with part of it, although unstably. The lesion's partial entrapment of the tail should hinder the tail from interacting with other nucleosomes, and other proteins such as acetylases, deacetylases, and acetyl-lysine binding proteins, and thus disrupt critical tail-governed processes. Hence, the lesion would impede tail functions modulated by acetylation or deacetylation, causing aberrant chromatin structures and impaired biological transactions such as transcription and DNA repair.- Published
- 2017
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32. Translesion synthesis past guanine(C8)-thymine(N3) intrastrand cross-links catalyzed by selected A- and Y-family polymerases.
- Author
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Lee YA, Lee YC, Geacintov NE, and Shafirovich V
- Subjects
- Catalysis, DNA chemistry, DNA Damage, DNA Polymerase III chemistry, DNA Repair, DNA Replication, DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase chemistry, DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase metabolism, Guanine metabolism, Humans, Molecular Structure, Thymine metabolism, DNA genetics, DNA metabolism, DNA Polymerase III metabolism, Guanine chemistry, Thymine chemistry
- Abstract
Oxidatively generated guanine radicals in DNA can undergo various nucleophilic reactions including the formation of C8-guanine cross-links with adjacent or nearby N3-thymines in DNA in the presence of O2. These G[8-3]T lesions have been identified in the DNA of human cells exposed to oxidative stress, and are most likely genotoxic if not removed by cellular defence mechanisms. The abilities of several representative polymerases to bypass the G[8-3]T lesions in two different sequence contexts, G*T* and G*CT*, were assessed in vitro. The polymerase BF (bacillus fragment) from Bacillus stearothermophilus, the Y-family archaeal polymerases Dpo4 from Sulfolobus sulfataricus P2, and human DNA pol κ and pol η were selected for the study. The A-family polymerase BF was strongly blocked, while relatively weak translesion synthesis was observed in the case of Y-family polymerases Dpo4 and pol κ. Primer extension catalyzed by pol η was also partially stalled at various positions at or near the G[8-3]T cross-linked bases, but a significant and distributive primer extension was observed beyond the sites of the lesions with the efficiency being consistently greater in the case of G*CT* than in the case of G*T* lesions. The results obtained with pol η are compared with translesion synthesis past other intrastrand cross-linked lesions with previously published results of others that include the isomeric G[8-5m]T lesions generated by ionizing radiation, the cis-syn cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer and the 6-4 photoproduct generated by UV irradiation, and the Pt-G*G* lesions derived from the reactions of the chemotherapeutic agent cisplatin with DNA.
- Published
- 2016
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33. Base and Nucleotide Excision Repair of Oxidatively Generated Guanine Lesions in DNA.
- Author
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Shafirovich V, Kropachev K, Anderson T, Liu Z, Kolbanovskiy M, Martin BD, Sugden K, Shim Y, Chen X, Min JH, and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Cells, DNA Glycosylases genetics, DNA Glycosylases metabolism, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Guanine metabolism, Guanine toxicity, HeLa Cells, Humans, Mice, DNA Repair, Guanine analogs & derivatives, Oxidative Stress
- Abstract
The well known biomarker of oxidative stress, 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine, is more susceptible to further oxidation than the parent guanine base and can be oxidatively transformed to the genotoxic spiroiminodihydantoin (Sp) and 5-guanidinohydantoin (Gh) lesions. Incubation of 135-mer duplexes with single Sp or Gh lesions in human cell extracts yields a characteristic nucleotide excision repair (NER)-induced ladder of short dual incision oligonucleotide fragments in addition to base excision repair (BER) incision products. The ladders were not observed when NER was inhibited either by mouse monoclonal antibody (5F12) to human XPA or in XPC(-/-) fibroblast cell extracts. However, normal NER activity appeared when the XPC(-/-) cell extracts were complemented with XPC-RAD23B proteins. The Sp and Gh lesions are excellent substrates of both BER and NER. In contrast, 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole, a product of the oxidation of guanine in DNA by peroxynitrite, is an excellent substrate of BER only. In the case of mouse embryonic fibroblasts, BER of the Sp lesion is strongly reduced in NEIL1(-/-) relative to NEIL1(+/+) extracts. In summary, in human cell extracts, BER and NER activities co-exist and excise Gh and Sp DNA lesions, suggesting that the relative NER/BER product ratios may depend on competitive BER and NER protein binding to these lesions., (© 2016 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.)
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- 2016
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34. Entrapment of a Histone Tail by a DNA Lesion in a Nucleosome Suggests the Lesion Impacts Epigenetic Marking: A Molecular Dynamics Study.
- Author
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Fu I, Cai Y, Zhang Y, Geacintov NE, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- Humans, Models, Biological, DNA metabolism, Epigenesis, Genetic genetics, Histones chemistry, Histones metabolism, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Nucleosomes metabolism
- Abstract
Errors in epigenetic markings are associated with human diseases, including cancer. We have used molecular dynamics simulations of a nucleosome containing the 10S (+)-trans-anti-B[a]P-N(2)-dG lesion, derived from the environmental pro-carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene, to elucidate the impact of the lesion on the structure and dynamics of a nearby histone N-terminal tail. Our results show that a lysine-containing part of this H2B tail that is subject to post-translational modification is engulfed by the enlarged DNA minor groove imposed by the lesion. The tail entrapment suggests that epigenetic markings could be hampered by this lesion, thereby impacting critical cellular functions, including transcription and repair.
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- 2016
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35. Characterization of the interactions of PARP-1 with UV-damaged DNA in vivo and in vitro.
- Author
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Purohit NK, Robu M, Shah RG, Geacintov NE, and Shah GM
- Subjects
- Biocatalysis radiation effects, Chemical Precipitation, DNA metabolism, DNA Footprinting, DNA Repair radiation effects, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Deoxyribodipyrimidine Photo-Lyase metabolism, Green Fluorescent Proteins metabolism, Humans, Models, Biological, Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerases chemistry, Protein Binding radiation effects, Protein Domains, Pyrimidine Dimers metabolism, Reproducibility of Results, DNA Damage, Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerases metabolism, Ultraviolet Rays
- Abstract
The existing methodologies for studying robust responses of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) to DNA damage with strand breaks are often not suitable for examining its subtle responses to altered DNA without strand breaks, such as UV-damaged DNA. Here we describe two novel assays with which we characterized the interaction of PARP-1 with UV-damaged DNA in vivo and in vitro. Using an in situ fractionation technique to selectively remove free PARP-1 while retaining the DNA-bound PARP-1, we demonstrate a direct recruitment of the endogenous or exogenous PARP-1 to the UV-lesion site in vivo after local irradiation. In addition, using the model oligonucleotides with single UV lesion surrounded by multiple restriction enzyme sites, we demonstrate in vitro that DDB2 and PARP-1 can simultaneously bind to UV-damaged DNA and that PARP-1 casts a bilateral asymmetric footprint from -12 to +9 nucleotides on either side of the UV-lesion. These techniques will permit characterization of different roles of PARP-1 in the repair of UV-damaged DNA and also allow the study of normal housekeeping roles of PARP-1 with undamaged DNA.
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- 2016
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36. Nucleotide Excision Repair and Transcription-coupled DNA Repair Abrogate the Impact of DNA Damage on Transcription.
- Author
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Nadkarni A, Burns JA, Gandolfi A, Chowdhury MA, Cartularo L, Berens C, Geacintov NE, and Scicchitano DA
- Subjects
- DNA metabolism, DNA Primers metabolism, Fibroblasts metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Genetic Vectors metabolism, Humans, Luminescent Proteins metabolism, Models, Biological, Phenotype, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons chemistry, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons metabolism, RNA Polymerase II metabolism, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Templates, Genetic, Transcription Elongation, Genetic, Red Fluorescent Protein, DNA Damage genetics, DNA Repair genetics, Transcription, Genetic
- Abstract
DNA adducts derived from carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons like benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P) and benzo[c]phenanthrene (B[c]Ph) impede replication and transcription, resulting in aberrant cell division and gene expression. Global nucleotide excision repair (NER) and transcription-coupled DNA repair (TCR) are among the DNA repair pathways that evolved to maintain genome integrity by removing DNA damage. The interplay between global NER and TCR in repairing the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon-derived DNA adducts (+)-trans-anti-B[a]P-N(6)-dA, which is subject to NER and blocks transcription in vitro, and (+)-trans-anti-B[c]Ph-N(6)-dA, which is a poor substrate for NER but also blocks transcription in vitro, was tested. The results show that both adducts inhibit transcription in human cells that lack both NER and TCR. The (+)-trans-anti-B[a]P-N(6)-dA lesion exhibited no detectable effect on transcription in cells proficient in NER but lacking TCR, indicating that NER can remove the lesion in the absence of TCR, which is consistent with in vitro data. In primary human cells lacking NER, (+)-trans-anti-B[a]P-N(6)-dA exhibited a deleterious effect on transcription that was less severe than in cells lacking both pathways, suggesting that TCR can repair the adduct but not as effectively as global NER. In contrast, (+)-trans-anti-B[c]Ph-N(6)-dA dramatically reduces transcript production in cells proficient in global NER but lacking TCR, indicating that TCR is necessary for the removal of this adduct, which is consistent with in vitro data showing that it is a poor substrate for NER. Hence, both global NER and TCR enhance the recovery of gene expression following DNA damage, and TCR plays an important role in removing DNA damage that is refractory to NER., (© 2016 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.)
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- 2016
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37. Correction: Resistance to Nucleotide Excision Repair of Bulky Guanine Adducts Opposite Abasic Sites in DNA Duplexes and Relationships between Structure and Function.
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Liu Z, Ding S, Kropachev K, Jia L, Amin S, Broyde S, and Geacintov NE
- Published
- 2015
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38. Resistance to Nucleotide Excision Repair of Bulky Guanine Adducts Opposite Abasic Sites in DNA Duplexes and Relationships between Structure and Function.
- Author
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Liu Z, Ding S, Kropachev K, Jia L, Amin S, Broyde S, and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- Base Pairing, Base Sequence, Benzo(a)pyrene chemistry, Carcinogens chemistry, HeLa Cells, Humans, Intercalating Agents chemistry, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Molecular Sequence Data, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Protein Binding, Structure-Activity Relationship, Cytosine chemistry, DNA Adducts chemistry, DNA Repair, DNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) Lyase chemistry, Guanine chemistry
- Abstract
The nucleotide excision repair of certain bulky DNA lesions is abrogated in some specific non-canonical DNA base sequence contexts, while the removal of the same lesions by the nucleotide excision repair mechanism is efficient in duplexes in which all base pairs are complementary. Here we show that the nucleotide excision repair activity in human cell extracts is moderate-to-high in the case of two stereoisomeric DNA lesions derived from the pro-carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene (cis- and trans-B[a]P-N2-dG adducts) in a normal DNA duplex. By contrast, the nucleotide excision repair activity is completely abrogated when the canonical cytosine base opposite the B[a]P-dG adducts is replaced by an abasic site in duplex DNA. However, base excision repair of the abasic site persists. In order to understand the structural origins of these striking phenomena, we used NMR and molecular spectroscopy techniques to evaluate the conformational features of 11mer DNA duplexes containing these B[a]P-dG lesions opposite abasic sites. Our results show that in these duplexes containing the clustered lesions, both B[a]P-dG adducts adopt base-displaced intercalated conformations, with the B[a]P aromatic rings intercalated into the DNA helix. To explain the persistence of base excision repair in the face of the opposed bulky B[a]P ring system, molecular modeling results suggest how the APE1 base excision repair endonuclease, that excises abasic lesions, can bind productively even with the trans-B[a]P-dG positioned opposite the abasic site. We hypothesize that the nucleotide excision repair resistance is fostered by local B[a]P residue-DNA base stacking interactions at the abasic sites, that are facilitated by the absence of the cytosine partner base in the complementary strand. More broadly, this study sets the stage for elucidating the interplay between base excision and nucleotide excision repair in processing different types of clustered DNA lesions that are substrates of nucleotide excision repair or base excision repair mechanisms.
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- 2015
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39. Recognition of Damaged DNA for Nucleotide Excision Repair: A Correlated Motion Mechanism with a Mismatched cis-syn Thymine Dimer Lesion.
- Author
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Mu H, Geacintov NE, Zhang Y, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- DNA metabolism, DNA-Binding Proteins chemistry, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Humans, Models, Molecular, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Motion, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Protein Binding, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins chemistry, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins metabolism, DNA chemistry, DNA Damage, DNA Repair, Pyrimidine Dimers chemistry
- Abstract
Mammalian global genomic nucleotide excision repair requires lesion recognition by XPC, whose detailed binding mechanism remains to be elucidated. Here we have delineated the dynamic molecular pathway and energetics of lesion-specific and productive binding by the Rad4/yeast XPC lesion recognition factor, as it forms the open complex [Min, J. H., and Pavletich, N. P. (2007) Nature 449, 570-575; Chen, X., et al. (2015) Nat. Commun. 6, 5849] that is required for excision. We investigated extensively a cis-syn cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer in mismatched duplex DNA, using high-level computational approaches. Our results delineate a preferred correlated motion mechanism, which provides for the first time an atomistic description of the sequence of events as Rad4 productively binds to the damaged DNA.
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- 2015
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40. Differences in the Access of Lesions to the Nucleotide Excision Repair Machinery in Nucleosomes.
- Author
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Cai Y, Kropachev K, Terzidis MA, Masi A, Chatgilialoglu C, Shafirovich V, Geacintov NE, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- DNA chemistry, DNA Adducts chemistry, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Thermodynamics, DNA Repair, Nucleosomes chemistry
- Abstract
In nucleosomes, the access of DNA lesions to nucleotide excision repair is hindered by histone proteins. However, evidence that the nature of the DNA lesions may play a role in facilitating access is emerging, but these phenomena are not well-understood. We have used molecular dynamics simulations to elucidate the structural, dynamic, and energetic properties of the R and S 5'-8-cyclo-2'-dG and the (+)-cis-anti-B[a]P-dG lesions in a nucleosome. Our results show that the (+)-cis-anti-B[a]P-dG adduct is more dynamic and more destabilizing than the smaller and more constrained 5',8-cyclo-2'-dG lesions, suggesting more facile access to the more bulky (+)-cis-anti-B[a]P-dG lesion.
- Published
- 2015
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41. Oxidatively Generated Guanine(C8)-Thymine(N3) Intrastrand Cross-links in Double-stranded DNA Are Repaired by Base Excision Repair Pathways.
- Author
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Talhaoui I, Shafirovich V, Liu Z, Saint-Pierre C, Akishev Z, Matkarimov BT, Gasparutto D, Geacintov NE, and Saparbaev M
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, DNA metabolism, DNA Glycosylases metabolism, HeLa Cells, Humans, Molecular Sequence Data, Oligonucleotides metabolism, Oxidation-Reduction, DNA chemistry, DNA Repair, Oligonucleotides chemistry
- Abstract
Oxidatively generated guanine radical cations in DNA can undergo various nucleophilic reactions including the formation of C8-guanine cross-links with adjacent or nearby N3-thymines in DNA in the presence of O2. The G*[C8-N3]T* lesions have been identified in the DNA of human cells exposed to oxidative stress, and are most likely genotoxic if not removed by cellular defense mechanisms. It has been shown that the G*[C8-N3]T* lesions are substrates of nucleotide excision repair in human cell extracts. Cleavage at the sites of the lesions was also observed but not further investigated (Ding et al. (2012) Nucleic Acids Res. 40, 2506-2517). Using a panel of eukaryotic and prokaryotic bifunctional DNA glycosylases/lyases (NEIL1, Nei, Fpg, Nth, and NTH1) and apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases (Apn1, APE1, and Nfo), the analysis of cleavage fragments by PAGE and MALDI-TOF/MS show that the G*[C8-N3]T* lesions in 17-mer duplexes are incised on either side of G*, that none of the recovered cleavage fragments contain G*, and that T* is converted to a normal T in the 3'-fragment cleavage products. The abilities of the DNA glycosylases to incise the DNA strand adjacent to G*, while this base is initially cross-linked with T*, is a surprising observation and an indication of the versatility of these base excision repair proteins., (© 2015 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.)
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- 2015
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42. Human DNA polymerases catalyze lesion bypass across benzo[a]pyrene-derived DNA adduct clustered with an abasic site.
- Author
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Starostenko LV, Rechkunova NI, Lebedeva NA, Kolbanovskiy A, Geacintov NE, and Lavrik OI
- Subjects
- 7,8-Dihydro-7,8-dihydroxybenzo(a)pyrene 9,10-oxide analogs & derivatives, 7,8-Dihydro-7,8-dihydroxybenzo(a)pyrene 9,10-oxide chemistry, 7,8-Dihydro-7,8-dihydroxybenzo(a)pyrene 9,10-oxide metabolism, Base Sequence, Benzo(a)pyrene chemistry, Catalysis, DNA Adducts chemistry, DNA Polymerase I chemistry, DNA Polymerase I metabolism, DNA Polymerase beta metabolism, DNA Repair, DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase chemistry, Deoxyguanosine analogs & derivatives, Deoxyguanosine chemistry, Deoxyguanosine metabolism, Humans, Molecular Sequence Data, Benzo(a)pyrene metabolism, DNA Adducts metabolism, DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase metabolism
- Abstract
The combined action of oxidative stress and genotoxic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons derivatives can lead to cluster-type DNA damage that includes both a modified nucleotide and a bulky lesion. As an example, we investigated the possibility of repair of an AP site located opposite a minor groove-positioned (+)-trans-BPDE-dG or a base-displaced intercalated (+)-cis-BPDE-dG adduct (BP lesion) by a BER system. Oligonucleotides with single uracil residue in the certain position were annealed with complementary oligonucleotides bearing either a cis- or trans-BP adduct. Digestion with uracil DNA glycosylase was utilized to generate an AP site which was then hydrolyzed by APE1, and the resulting gap was processed by X-family DNA polymerases β (Polβ) and λ (Polλ), or Y-family polymerase ι (Polι). By varying reaction conditions, namely, Mg2+/Mn2+ replacement/combination and ionic strength decrease, we found that under certain conditions both Polβ and Polι can catalyze lesion bypass across both cis- and trans-BP adducts in the presence of physiological dNTP concentrations. Polβ and Polι catalyze gap filling trans-lesion synthesis in an error prone manner. By contrast, Polλ selectively introduced the correct dCTP opposite the modified dG in the case of cis-BP-dG adduct only, and did not bypass the stereoisomeric trans-adduct under any of the conditions examined. The results suggest that Polλ is a specialized polymerase that can process these kinds of lesions.
- Published
- 2014
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43. Identification of novel DNA-damage tolerance genes reveals regulation of translesion DNA synthesis by nucleophosmin.
- Author
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Ziv O, Zeisel A, Mirlas-Neisberg N, Swain U, Nevo R, Ben-Chetrit N, Martelli MP, Rossi R, Schiesser S, Canman CE, Carell T, Geacintov NE, Falini B, Domany E, and Livneh Z
- Subjects
- Cell Line, DNA Repair, DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase genetics, DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase metabolism, Humans, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute enzymology, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute genetics, Nuclear Proteins genetics, Nucleophosmin, Protein Binding, Ultraviolet Rays, DNA Damage radiation effects, DNA Replication radiation effects, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute metabolism, Nuclear Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Cells cope with replication-blocking lesions via translesion DNA synthesis (TLS). TLS is carried out by low-fidelity DNA polymerases that replicate across lesions, thereby preventing genome instability at the cost of increased point mutations. Here we perform a two-stage siRNA-based functional screen for mammalian TLS genes and identify 17 validated TLS genes. One of the genes, NPM1, is frequently mutated in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). We show that NPM1 (nucleophosmin) regulates TLS via interaction with the catalytic core of DNA polymerase-η (polη), and that NPM1 deficiency causes a TLS defect due to proteasomal degradation of polη. Moreover, the prevalent NPM1c+ mutation that causes NPM1 mislocalization in ~30% of AML patients results in excessive degradation of polη. These results establish the role of NPM1 as a key TLS regulator, and suggest a mechanism for the better prognosis of AML patients carrying mutations in NPM1.
- Published
- 2014
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44. Structural and dynamic characterization of polymerase κ's minor groove lesion processing reveals how adduct topology impacts fidelity.
- Author
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Lior-Hoffmann L, Ding S, Geacintov NE, Zhang Y, and Broyde S
- Subjects
- 2-Acetylaminofluorene analogs & derivatives, 2-Acetylaminofluorene chemistry, 2-Acetylaminofluorene metabolism, Base Pair Mismatch, Catalytic Domain, DNA Adducts chemistry, DNA Adducts metabolism, Deoxyguanosine analogs & derivatives, Deoxyguanosine chemistry, Deoxyguanosine metabolism, Humans, Models, Molecular, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Protein Conformation, Substrate Specificity, DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase chemistry, DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase metabolism
- Abstract
DNA lesion bypass polymerases process different lesions with varying fidelities, but the structural, dynamic, and mechanistic origins of this phenomenon remain poorly understood. Human DNA polymerase κ (Polκ), a member of the Y family of lesion bypass polymerases, is specialized to bypass bulky DNA minor groove lesions in a predominantly error-free manner, by housing them in its unique gap. We have investigated the role of the unique Polκ gap and N-clasp structural features in the fidelity of minor groove lesion processing with extensive molecular modeling and molecular dynamics simulations to pinpoint their functioning in lesion bypass. Here we consider the N(2)-dG covalent adduct derived from the carcinogenic aromatic amine, 2-acetylaminofluorene (dG-N(2)-AAF), that is produced via the combustion of kerosene and diesel fuel. Our simulations reveal how the spacious gap directionally accommodates the lesion aromatic ring system as it transits through the stages of incorporation of the predominant correct partner dCTP opposite the damaged guanine, with preservation of local active site organization for nucleotidyl transfer. Furthermore, flexibility in Polκ's N-clasp facilitates the significant misincorporation of dTTP opposite dG-N(2)-AAF via wobble pairing. Notably, we show that N-clasp flexibility depends on lesion topology, being markedly reduced in the case of the benzo[a]pyrene-derived major adduct to N(2)-dG, whose bypass by Polκ is nearly error-free. Thus, our studies reveal how Polκ's unique structural and dynamic properties can regulate its bypass fidelity of polycyclic aromatic lesions and how the fidelity is impacted by lesion structures.
- Published
- 2014
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45. The relationships between XPC binding to conformationally diverse DNA adducts and their excision by the human NER system: is there a correlation?
- Author
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Lee YC, Cai Y, Mu H, Broyde S, Amin S, Chen X, Min JH, and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- Benzopyrenes pharmacology, Cisplatin pharmacology, DNA Adducts biosynthesis, DNA Damage drug effects, DNA Damage genetics, DNA Damage radiation effects, DNA Repair drug effects, DNA Repair radiation effects, DNA Repair Enzymes biosynthesis, DNA Repair Enzymes chemistry, DNA-Binding Proteins biosynthesis, DNA-Binding Proteins chemistry, Humans, Nucleic Acid Conformation drug effects, Nucleic Acid Conformation radiation effects, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation drug effects, Protein Conformation radiation effects, Ultraviolet Rays, DNA Adducts genetics, DNA Repair genetics, DNA Repair Enzymes genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics
- Abstract
The first eukaryotic NER factor that recognizes NER substrates is the heterodimeric XPC-RAD23B protein. The currently accepted hypothesis is that this protein recognizes the distortions/destabilization caused by DNA lesions rather than the lesions themselves. The resulting XPC-RAD23B-DNA complexes serve as scaffolds for the recruitment of subsequent NER factors that lead to the excision of the oligonucleotide sequences containing the lesions. Based on several well-known examples of DNA lesions like the UV radiation-induced CPD and 6-4 photodimers, as well as cisplatin-derived intrastrand cross-linked lesions, it is generally believed that the differences in excision activities in human cell extracts is correlated with the binding affinities of XPC-RAD23B to these DNA lesions. However, using electrophoretic mobility shift assays, we have found that XPC-RAD23B binding affinities of certain bulky lesions derived from metabolically activated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon compounds such as benzo[a]pyrene and dibenzo[a,l]pyrene, are not directly, or necessarily correlated with NER excision activities observed in cell-free extracts. These findings point to features of XPC-RAD23B-bulky DNA adduct complexes that may involve the formation of NER-productive or unproductive forms of binding that depend on the structural and stereochemical properties of the DNA adducts studied. The pronounced differences in NER cleavage efficiencies observed in cell-free extracts may be due to differences in the successful recruitment of subsequent NER factors by the XPC-RAD23B-DNA adduct complexes, and/or in the verification step. These phenomena appear to depend on the structural and conformational properties of the class of bulky DNA adducts studied., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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46. Generation of guanine-amino acid cross-links by a free radical combination mechanism.
- Author
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Uvaydov Y, Geacintov NE, and Shafirovich V
- Subjects
- Cross-Linking Reagents chemistry, Free Radicals chemistry, Molecular Structure, Amino Acids chemistry, Cross-Linking Reagents chemical synthesis, Guanine chemistry
- Abstract
A direct method has been developed for the in vitro synthesis of stable DNA-protein cross-links (DPC's) between guanine and amino acids (lysine and arginine). This method employs the combination of guanine neutral radicals, G(-H)˙, and side-chain C-centered amino acid radicals. The latter were generated indirectly after first causing the selective photoionization of 2-aminopurine (2AP) embedded in the oligonucleotide, 5'-d(CC[2AP]TCGCTACC), by intense nanosecond 308 nm excimer laser pulses. The 2AP radical cation deprotonates rapidly to form the 2AP(-H)˙ neutral radical which, in turn, oxidizes the nearby guanine to form the neutral guanine G(-H)˙ radical, as described previously (Shafirovich et al., J. Phys. Chem. B, 2001, 105, 8431). In parallel, the hydrated electrons, generated by the photoionization of 2AP, are scavenged by nitrous oxide to generate hydroxyl radicals. In the presence of a large excess of the amino acids, the hydroxyl radicals oxidize the latter to produce C-centered amino acid radicals that combine with the G(-H)˙ radicals to form the guanine-amino acid cross-linked oligonucleotide product. Analogous products were generated by photoionizing the free nucleoside, 2',3',5'-tri-O-acetylguanosine, (tri-O-Ac-Guo), using intense nanosecond 266 nm Nd:YAG laser pulse irradiation. The guanine-amino acid cross-links thus produced site-specifically positioned either in oligonucleotides, or in the free nucleoside tri-O-Ac-Guo were isolated by HPLC methods and identified by high resolution LC-TOF/MS and LC-MS/MS methods. The possibility that analogous guanine-amino acid cross-linked products could be formed in vivo using single hit radical generation mechanisms during oxidative stress is discussed.
- Published
- 2014
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47. One-electron oxidation reactions of purine and pyrimidine bases in cellular DNA.
- Author
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Cadet J, Wagner JR, Shafirovich V, and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- DNA Adducts chemistry, DNA Adducts radiation effects, Electrons, Free Radicals chemistry, Free Radicals radiation effects, Models, Chemical, Oxidation-Reduction, Purines chemistry, Pyrimidines chemistry, DNA chemistry, DNA radiation effects, DNA Damage
- Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this survey is to critically review the available information on one-electron oxidation reactions of nucleobases in cellular DNA with emphasis on damage induced through the transient generation of purine and pyrimidine radical cations. Since the indirect effect of ionizing radiation mediated by hydroxyl radical is predominant in cells, efforts have been made to selectively ionize bases using suitable one-electron oxidants that consist among others of high intensity UVC laser pulses. Thus, the main oxidation product in cellular DNA was found to be 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine as a result of direct bi-photonic ionization of guanine bases and indirect formation of guanine radical cations through hole transfer reactions from other base radical cations. The formation of 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine and other purine and pyrimidine degradation products was rationalized in terms of the initial generation of related radical cations followed by either hydration or deprotonation reactions in agreement with mechanistic pathways inferred from detailed mechanistic studies. The guanine radical cation has been shown to be implicated in three other nucleophilic additions that give rise to DNA-protein and DNA-DNA cross-links in model systems. Evidence was recently provided for the occurrence of these three reactions in cellular DNA., Conclusion: There is growing evidence that one-electron oxidation reactions of nucleobases whose mechanisms have been characterized in model studies involving aqueous solutions take place in a similar way in cells. It may also be pointed out that the above cross-linked lesions are only produced from the guanine radical cation and may be considered as diagnostic products of the direct effect of ionizing radiation.
- Published
- 2014
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48. Mechanistic aspects of hydration of guanine radical cations in DNA.
- Author
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Rokhlenko Y, Cadet J, Geacintov NE, and Shafirovich V
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, DNA genetics, DNA, Single-Stranded chemistry, DNA, Single-Stranded genetics, DNA, Single-Stranded metabolism, Free Radicals metabolism, Guanine analogs & derivatives, Kinetics, Photolysis, DNA chemistry, DNA metabolism, Guanine metabolism, Water metabolism
- Abstract
The mechanistic aspects of hydration of guanine radical cations, G(•+) in double- and single-stranded oligonucleotides were investigated by direct time-resolved spectroscopic monitoring methods. The G(•+) radical one-electron oxidation products were generated by SO4(•-) radical anions derived from the photolysis of S2O8(2-) anions by 308 nm laser pulses. In neutral aqueous solutions (pH 7.0), after the complete decay of SO4(•-) radicals (∼5 μs after the actinic laser flash) the transient absorbance of neutral guanine radicals, G(-H)(•) with maximum at 312 nm, is dominant. The kinetics of decay of G(-H)(•) radicals depend strongly on the DNA secondary structure. In double-stranded DNA, the G(-H)(•) decay is biphasic with one component decaying with a lifetime of ∼2.2 ms and the other with a lifetime of ∼0.18 s. By contrast, in single-stranded DNA the G(-H)(•) radicals decay monophasically with a ∼ 0.28 s lifetime. The ms decay component in double-stranded DNA is correlated with the enhancement of 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG) yields which are ∼7 greater than in single-stranded DNA. In double-stranded DNA, it is proposed that the G(-H)(•) radicals retain radical cation character by sharing the N1-proton with the N3-site of C in the [G(•+):C] base pair. This [G(-H)(•):H(+)C ⇆ G(•+):C] equilibrium allows for the hydration of G(•+) followed by formation of 8-oxoG. By contrast, in single-stranded DNA, deprotonation of G(•+) and the irreversible escape of the proton into the aqueous phase competes more effectively with the hydration mechanism, thus diminishing the yield of 8-oxoG, as observed experimentally.
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- 2014
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49. Structural basis for the recognition of diastereomeric 5',8-cyclo-2'-deoxypurine lesions by the human nucleotide excision repair system.
- Author
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Kropachev K, Ding S, Terzidis MA, Masi A, Liu Z, Cai Y, Kolbanovskiy M, Chatgilialoglu C, Broyde S, Geacintov NE, and Shafirovich V
- Subjects
- DNA chemistry, DNA Damage, Deoxyguanosine chemistry, HeLa Cells, Humans, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Stereoisomerism, DNA Repair, Deoxyadenosines chemistry, Deoxyguanosine analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
The hydroxyl radical is a powerful oxidant that generates DNA lesions including the stereoisomeric R and S 5',8-cyclo-2'-deoxyadenosine (cdA) and 5',8-cyclo-2'-deoxyguanosine (cdG) pairs that have been detected in cellular DNA. Unlike some other oxidatively generated DNA lesions, cdG and cdA are repaired by the human nucleotide excision repair (NER) apparatus. The relative NER efficiencies of all four cyclopurines were measured and compared in identical human HeLa cell extracts for the first time under identical conditions, using identical sequence contexts. The cdA and cdG lesions were excised with similar efficiencies, but the efficiencies for both 5'R cyclopurines were greater by a factor of ∼2 than for the 5'S lesions. Molecular modeling and dynamics simulations have revealed structural and energetic origins of this difference in NER-incision efficiencies. These lesions cause greater DNA backbone distortions and dynamics relative to unmodified DNA in 5'R than in 5'S stereoisomers, producing greater impairment in van der Waals stacking interaction energies in the 5'R cases. The locally impaired stacking interaction energies correlate with relative NER incision efficiencies, and explain these results on a structural basis in terms of differences in dynamic perturbations of the DNA backbone imposed by the R and S covalent 5',8 bonds.
- Published
- 2014
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50. Nuclear magnetic resonance studies of an N2-guanine adduct derived from the tumorigen dibenzo[a,l]pyrene in DNA: impact of adduct stereochemistry, size, and local DNA sequence on solution conformations.
- Author
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Rodríguez FA, Liu Z, Lin CH, Ding S, Cai Y, Kolbanovskiy A, Kolbanovskiy M, Amin S, Broyde S, and Geacintov NE
- Subjects
- Base Sequence genetics, Crystallography, X-Ray, DNA Adducts genetics, Humans, Protein Conformation, Stereoisomerism, Benzopyrenes chemistry, Carcinogens chemistry, DNA Adducts chemistry, Guanine chemistry, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy methods
- Abstract
The dimensions and arrangements of aromatic rings (topology) in adducts derived from the reactions of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) diol epoxide metabolites with DNA influence the distortions and stabilities of double-stranded DNA, and hence their recognition and processing by the human nucleotide excision repair (NER) system. Dibenzo[a,l]pyrene (DB[a,l]P) is a highly tumorigenic six-ring PAH, which contains a nonplanar and aromatic fjord region that is absent in the structurally related bay region five-ring PAH benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P). The PAH diol epoxide-DNA adducts formed include the stereoisomeric 14S and 14R trans-anti-DB[a,l]P-N(2)-dG and the stereochemically analogous 10S- and 10R-B[a]P-N(2)-dG (B[a]P-dG) guanine adducts. However, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) solution studies of the 14S-DB[a,l]P-N(2)-dG adduct in DNA have not yet been presented. Here we have investigated the 14S-DB[a,l]P-N(2)-dG adduct in two different sequence contexts using NMR methods with distance-restrained molecular dynamics simulations. In duplexes with dC opposite the adduct deleted, a well-resolved base-displaced intercalative adduct conformation can be observed. In full duplexes, in contrast to the intercalated 14R stereoisomeric adduct, the bulky DB[a,l]P residue in the 14S adduct is positioned in a greatly widened and distorted minor groove, with significant disruptions and distortions of base pairing at the lesion site and two 5'-side adjacent base pairs. These unique structural features are significantly different from those of the stereochemically analogous but smaller B[a]P-dG adduct. The greater size and different topology of the DB[a,l]P aromatic ring system lead to greater structurally destabilizing DNA distortions that are partially compensated by stabilizing DB[a,l]P-DNA van der Waals interactions, whose combined effects impact the NER response to the adduct. These structural results broaden our understanding of the structure-function relationship in NER.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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