145 research outputs found
LES PROTEINES KIN17, XPC, DNA-PKCS ET XRCC4 DANS LA REPONSE CELLULAIRE AUX DOMMAGES DE L'ADN. ETUDE DES RELATIONS ENTRE LA REPARATION PAR EXCISION DE NUCLEOTIDES ET LA RECOMBINAISON NON HOMOLOGUE DANS UN MODELE SYNGENIQUE HUMAIN
The response to genotoxic stress involves many cellular factors in a complex network of mechanisms that aim to preserve the genetic integrity of the organism. These mechanisms enclose the detection and repair of DNA lesions, the regulation of transcription and replication and, eventually, the setting of cell death. Among the nuclear proteins involved in this response, kin17 proteins are zinc-finger proteins conserved through evolution and activated by ultraviolet (UV) or ionizing radiations (IR). We showed that human kin17 protein (HSAkin17) is found in the cell under a soluble form and a form tightly anchored to nuclear structures. A fraction of HSAkin17 protein is directly associated with chromatin. HSAkin17 protein is recruited to nuclear structures 24 hours after treatment with various agents inducing DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) and/or replication forks blocage. Moreover, the reduction of total HSAkin17 protein level sensitizises RKO cells to IR. We also present evidence for the involvement of HSAkin17 protein in DNA replication. This hypothesis was further confirmed by the biochemical demonstration of its belonging to the replication complex. HSAkin17 protein could link DNA replication and DNA repair, a defect in the HSAkin17 pathway leading to an increased radiosensitivity. In a second part, we studied the interactions between two DNA repair mechanisms: nucleotide excision repair (NER) and non-homologous end joining (NHEJ). NER repairs a wide variety of lesions inducing a distortion of the DNA double helix including UV-induced pyrimidine dimers. NHEJ allows the repair of DSB by direct joining of DNA ends. We used a syngenic model for DNA repair defects based on RNA interference developed in the laboratory. Epstein-Barr virus-derived vectors (pEBV) allow long-term expression of siRNA and specific exctinction of the targeted gene. The reduction of the expression of genes involved in NER (XPA and XPC) or NHEJ (DNA-PKcs and XRCC4) leads to the expected phenotypes. We showed that a reduced level of XPC protein sensitizes HeLa cells to etoposide, a topoisomerase II inhibitor that induced DSB, and affects their in vitro NHEJ activity. These results suggest that XPC protein could be required for the repair of certain types of breaks or could participate in a global regulation mechanism of the cellular response to DNA lesions. Our model offers interesting opportunities for studying the relations between the different DNA repair pathways in human cells.La réponse au stress génotoxique met en jeu de nombreux facteurs cellulaires impliqués dans un réseau complexe de mécanismes visant à assurer le maintien de l'intégrité génétique de l'organisme. Ces mécanismes incluent la détection et la réparation des lésions de l'ADN, la régulation de la transcription et de la réplication et le déclenchement éventuel de la mort cellulaire. Parmi les protéines nucléaires participant à cette réponse, les protéines kin17 sont des protéines à doigt de zinc conservées au cours de l'évolution et activées par les ultraviolets (UV) et les radiations ionisantes (RI). Nous avons montré que la protéine kin17 humaine (HSAkin17) est présente dans la cellule sous une forme soluble et sous une forme ancrée aux structures nucléaires. Une fraction de la protéine HSAkin17 est directement associée à la chromatine. La protéine HSAkin17 est recrutée sur les structures nucléaires 24 heures après traitement par différents agents induisant des cassures double-brin de l'ADN (DSB) et/ou un blocage des fourches de réplication. Par ailleurs, la réduction du niveau total de protéine HSAkin17 sensibilise les cellules RKO aux RI. Nous présentons également des résultats impliquant la protéine HSAkin17 dans la réplication de l'ADN. Cette hypothèse a été confirmée par la démonstration biochimique de son appartenance au complexe de réplication. La protéine HSAkin17 pourrait donc assurer le lien entre réplication et réparation de l'ADN, un défaut de la voie HSAkin17 entraînant une augmentation de la radiosensibilité. Dans un deuxième temps, nous avons étudié les interactions entre deux mécanismes de réparation de l'ADN : la réparation par excision de nucléotides (NER) et la recombinaison non homologue (NHEJ). Le NER prend en charge une grande variété de lésions provoquant une distortion de la double hélice d'ADN dont les dimères de pyrimidines induits par les UV. Le NHEJ assure la réparation des DSB par jonction directe des extrémités d'ADN. Nous avons utilisé un modèle syngénique de défaut de la réparation basé sur l'interférence ARN développé au laboratoire. En effet, les vecteurs dérivés du virus d'Epstein-Barr (pEBV) permettent l'expression à long terme de siRNA et l'extinction spécifique du gène cible. La réduction de l'expression de gènes impliqués dans le NER (XPA et XPC) ou le NHEJ (DNA-PKcs et XRCC4) entraîne les phénotypes attendus. Nous avons montré que la réduction du niveau de protéine XPC sensibilise les cellules HeLa à l'étoposide, un inhibiteur de la topoisomérase II qui induit des DBS, et affecte leur activité NHEJ in vitro. Ces résultats suggèrent que la protéine XPC pourrait être requise pour la réparation de certains types de cassures ou participer à un système global de régulation de la réponse cellulaire aux lésions de l'ADN. Notre modèle ouvre donc des perspectives intéressantes pour l'étude des relations entre les différentes voies de réparation de l'ADN dans des cellules humaines
Spiro-epoxyglycosides as Activity-Based Probes for Glycoside Hydrolase Family 99 Endomannosidase/Endomannanase
N-Glycans direct protein function, stability, folding and targeting, and influence immunogenicity. While most glycosidases that process N-glycans cleave a single sugar residue at a time, enzymes from glycoside hydrolase family 99 are endo-acting enzymes that cleave within complex N-glycans. Eukaryotic Golgi endo-1,2-α-mannosidase cleaves glucose-substituted mannose within immature glucosylated high-mannose N-glycans in the secretory pathway. Certain bacteria within the human gut microbiota produce endo-1,2-α-mannanase, which cleaves related structures within fungal mannan, as part of nutrient acquisition. An unconventional mechanism of catalysis was proposed for enzymes of this family, hinted at by crystal structures of imino/azasugars complexed within the active site. Based on this mechanism, we developed the synthesis of two glycosides bearing a spiro-epoxide at C-2 as electrophilic trap, to covalently bind a mechanistically important, conserved GH99 catalytic residue. The spiro-epoxyglycosides are equipped with a fluorescent tag, and following incubation with recombinant enzyme, allow concentration, time and pH dependent visualization of the bound enzyme using gel electrophoresis
TRAIP promotes DNA damage response during genome replication and is mutated in primordial dwarfism.
DNA lesions encountered by replicative polymerases threaten genome stability and cell cycle progression. Here we report the identification of mutations in TRAIP, encoding an E3 RING ubiquitin ligase, in patients with microcephalic primordial dwarfism. We establish that TRAIP relocalizes to sites of DNA damage, where it is required for optimal phosphorylation of H2AX and RPA2 during S-phase in response to ultraviolet (UV) irradiation, as well as fork progression through UV-induced DNA lesions. TRAIP is necessary for efficient cell cycle progression and mutations in TRAIP therefore limit cellular proliferation, providing a potential mechanism for microcephaly and dwarfism phenotypes. Human genetics thus identifies TRAIP as a component of the DNA damage response to replication-blocking DNA lesions.This work was supported by funding from the Medical Research Council and the European Research Council (ERC, 281847) (A.P.J.), the Lister Institute for Preventative Medicine (A.P.J. and G.S.S.), Medical Research Scotland (L.S.B.), German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF, 01GM1404) and E-RARE network EuroMicro (B.W), Wellcome Trust (M. Hurles), CMMC (P.N.), Cancer Research UK (C17183/A13030) (G.S.S. and M.R.H), Swiss National Science Foundation (P2ZHP3_158709) (O.M.), AIRC (12710) and ERC/EU FP7 (CIG_303806) (S.S.), Cancer Research UK (C6/A11224) and ERC/EU FP7 (HEALTH-F2- 2010-259893) (A.N.B. and S.P.J.).This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from NPG via http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng.345
Biotin sulfone tagged oligomannosides as immunogens for eliciting antibodies against specific mannan epitopes
Biotinylated tri and tetrasaccharide: α Man (1→3) α Man (1→2) α Man; α Man (1→3) α Man (1→2) α Man (1→2) α Man were prepared using methyl tertbutyl phenyl thioglycosides glycosyl donors (MBP) and biotin sulfone strategy. Three key mannosyl thioglycosidic donors have been prepared: one for 1→2 linkage and two for the 1→3 linkage (protected with a 4,6-O-benzylidene or a 4,6-di-O-benzyl). The benzyliden protected one was not found reactive enough, and the benzylated donor was preferred. These biotinylated oligomanosides were evaluated as antigen in Crohn disease diagnosis and used coupled to streptavidin as hapten for eliciting polyclonal antibodies in mice
UV stalled replication forks restart by re-priming in human fibroblasts
Restarting stalled replication forks is vital to avoid fatal replication errors. Previously, it was demonstrated that hydroxyurea-stalled replication forks rescue replication either by an active restart mechanism or by new origin firing. To our surprise, using the DNA fibre assay, we only detect a slightly reduced fork speed on a UV-damaged template during the first hour after UV exposure, and no evidence for persistent replication fork arrest. Interestingly, no evidence for persistent UV-induced fork stalling was observed even in translesion synthesis defective, Polηmut cells. In contrast, using an assay to measure DNA molecule elongation at the fork, we observe that continuous DNA elongation is severely blocked by UV irradiation, particularly in UV-damaged Polηmut cells. In conclusion, our data suggest that UV-blocked replication forks restart effectively through re-priming past the lesion, leaving only a small gap opposite the lesion. This allows continuation of replication on damaged DNA. If left unfilled, the gaps may collapse into DNA double-strand breaks that are repaired by a recombination pathway, similar to the fate of replication forks collapsed after hydroxyurea treatment
Caffeine Abolishes the Ultraviolet-Induced REV3 Translesion Replication Pathway in Mouse Cells
When a replicative DNA polymerase stalls upon encountering a photoproduct on the template strand, it is relieved by other low-processivity polymerase(s), which insert nucleotide(s) opposite the lesion. Using an alkaline sucrose density gradient sedimentation technique, we previously classified this process termed UV-induced translesion replication (UV-TLS) into two types. In human cancer cells or xeroderma pigmentosum variant (XP-V) cells, UV-TLS was inhibited by caffeine or proteasome inhibitors. However, in normal human cells, the process was insensitive to these reagents. Reportedly, in yeast or mammalian cells, REV3 protein (a catalytic subunit of DNA polymerase ζ) is predominantly involved in the former type of TLS. Here, we studied UV-TLS in fibroblasts derived from the Rev3-knockout mouse embryo (Rev3KO-MEF). In the wild-type MEF, UV-TLS was slow (similar to that of human cancer cells or XP-V cells), and was abolished by caffeine or MG-262. In 2 cell lines of Rev3KO-MEF (Rev3−/− p53−/−), UV-TLS was not observed. In p53KO-MEF, which is a strict control for Rev3KO-MEF, the UV-TLS response was similar to that of the wild-type. Introduction of the Rev3 expression plasmid into Rev3KO-MEF restored the UV-TLS response in selected stable transformants. In some transformants, viability to UV was the same as that in the wild-type, and the death rate was increased by caffeine. Our findings indicate that REV3 is predominantly involved in UV-TLS in mouse cells, and that the REV3 translesion pathway is suppressed by caffeine or proteasome inhibitors
The impact of cyclin-dependent kinase 5 depletion on poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase activity and responses to radiation
Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) has been identified as a determinant of sensitivity to poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors. Here, the consequences of its depletion on cell survival, PARP activity, the recruitment of base excision repair (BER) proteins to DNA damage sites, and overall DNA single-strand break (SSB) repair were investigated using isogenic HeLa stably depleted (KD) and Control cell lines. Synthetic lethality achieved by disrupting PARP activity in Cdk5-deficient cells was confirmed, and the Cdk5KD cells were also found to be sensitive to the killing effects of ionizing radiation (IR) but not methyl methanesulfonate or neocarzinostatin. The recruitment profiles of GFP-PARP-1 and XRCC1-YFP to sites of micro-irradiated Cdk5KD cells were slower and reached lower maximum values, while the profile of GFP-PCNA recruitment was faster and attained higher maximum values compared to Control cells. Higher basal, IR, and hydrogen peroxide-induced polymer levels were observed in Cdk5KD compared to Control cells. Recruitment of GFP-PARP-1 in which serines 782, 785, and 786, potential Cdk5 phosphorylation targets, were mutated to alanines in micro-irradiated Control cells was also reduced. We hypothesize that Cdk5-dependent PARP-1 phosphorylation on one or more of these serines results in an attenuation of its ribosylating activity facilitating persistence at DNA damage sites. Despite these deficiencies, Cdk5KD cells are able to effectively repair SSBs probably via the long patch BER pathway, suggesting that the enhanced radiation sensitivity of Cdk5KD cells is due to a role of Cdk5 in other pathways or the altered polymer levels
Rad51 and DNA-PKcs are involved in the generation of specific telomere aberrations induced by the quadruplex ligand 360A that impair mitotic cell progression and lead to cell death
Functional telomeres are protected from non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) and homologous recombination (HR) DNA repair pathways. Replication is a critical period for telomeres because of the requirement for reconstitution of functional protected telomere conformations, a process that involves DNA repair proteins. Using knockdown of DNA-PKcs and Rad51 expression in three different cell lines, we demonstrate the respective involvement of NHEJ and HR in the formation of telomere aberrations induced by the G-quadruplex ligand 360A during or after replication. HR contributed to specific chromatid-type aberrations (telomere losses and doublets) affecting the lagging strand telomeres, whereas DNA-PKcs-dependent NHEJ was responsible for sister telomere fusions as a direct consequence of G-quadruplex formation and/or stabilization induced by 360A on parental telomere G strands. NHEJ and HR activation at telomeres altered mitotic progression in treated cells. In particular, NHEJ-mediated sister telomere fusions were associated with altered metaphase-anaphase transition and anaphase bridges and resulted in cell death during mitosis or early G1. Collectively, these data elucidate specific molecular and cellular mechanisms triggered by telomere targeting by the G-quadruplex ligand 360A, leading to cancer cell death
Evidence for Sequential and Increasing Activation of Replication Origins along Replication Timing Gradients in the Human Genome
Genome-wide replication timing studies have suggested that mammalian chromosomes consist of megabase-scale domains of coordinated origin firing separated by large originless transition regions. Here, we report a quantitative genome-wide analysis of DNA replication kinetics in several human cell types that contradicts this view. DNA combing in HeLa cells sorted into four temporal compartments of S phase shows that replication origins are spaced at 40 kb intervals and fire as small clusters whose synchrony increases during S phase and that replication fork velocity (mean 0.7 kb/min, maximum 2.0 kb/min) remains constant and narrowly distributed through S phase. However, multi-scale analysis of a genome-wide replication timing profile shows a broad distribution of replication timing gradients with practically no regions larger than 100 kb replicating at less than 2 kb/min. Therefore, HeLa cells lack large regions of unidirectional fork progression. Temporal transition regions are replicated by sequential activation of origins at a rate that increases during S phase and replication timing gradients are set by the delay and the spacing between successive origin firings rather than by the velocity of single forks. Activation of internal origins in a specific temporal transition region is directly demonstrated by DNA combing of the IGH locus in HeLa cells. Analysis of published origin maps in HeLa cells and published replication timing and DNA combing data in several other cell types corroborate these findings, with the interesting exception of embryonic stem cells where regions of unidirectional fork progression seem more abundant. These results can be explained if origins fire independently of each other but under the control of long-range chromatin structure, or if replication forks progressing from early origins stimulate initiation in nearby unreplicated DNA. These findings shed a new light on the replication timing program of mammalian genomes and provide a general model for their replication kinetics
ChemInform Abstract: One-Pot Synthesis of D-Glucosamine and Chitobiosyl Building Blocks Catalyzed by Triflic Acid on Molecular Sieves.
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