Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 17 de 17
Filtrar
Mais filtros








Base de dados
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Cell ; 186(22): 4898-4919.e25, 2023 10 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37827155

RESUMO

Expansions of repeat DNA tracts cause >70 diseases, and ongoing expansions in brains exacerbate disease. During expansion mutations, single-stranded DNAs (ssDNAs) form slipped-DNAs. We find the ssDNA-binding complexes canonical replication protein A (RPA1, RPA2, and RPA3) and Alternative-RPA (RPA1, RPA3, and primate-specific RPA4) are upregulated in Huntington disease and spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1) patient brains. Protein interactomes of RPA and Alt-RPA reveal unique and shared partners, including modifiers of CAG instability and disease presentation. RPA enhances in vitro melting, FAN1 excision, and repair of slipped-CAGs and protects against CAG expansions in human cells. RPA overexpression in SCA1 mouse brains ablates expansions, coincident with decreased ATXN1 aggregation, reduced brain DNA damage, improved neuron morphology, and rescued motor phenotypes. In contrast, Alt-RPA inhibits melting, FAN1 excision, and repair of slipped-CAGs and promotes CAG expansions. These findings suggest a functional interplay between the two RPAs where Alt-RPA may antagonistically offset RPA's suppression of disease-associated repeat expansions, which may extend to other DNA processes.


Assuntos
Proteína de Replicação A , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos , Animais , Humanos , Camundongos , DNA/genética , Reparo de Erro de Pareamento de DNA , Doença de Huntington/genética , Proteínas/genética , Ataxias Espinocerebelares/genética , Proteína de Replicação A/metabolismo
2.
Cell Rep ; 37(10): 110078, 2021 12 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34879276

RESUMO

Ongoing inchworm-like CAG and CGG repeat expansions in brains, arising by aberrant processing of slipped DNAs, may drive Huntington's disease, fragile X syndrome, and autism. FAN1 nuclease modifies hyper-expansion rates by unknown means. We show that FAN1, through iterative cycles, binds, dimerizes, and cleaves slipped DNAs, yielding striking exo-nuclease pauses along slip-outs: 5'-C↓A↓GC↓A↓G-3' and 5'-C↓T↓G↓C↓T↓G-3'. CAG excision is slower than CTG and requires intra-strand A·A and T·T mismatches. Fully paired hairpins arrested excision, whereas disease-delaying CAA interruptions further slowed excision. Endo-nucleolytic cleavage is insensitive to slip-outs. Rare FAN1 variants are found in individuals with autism with CGG/CCG expansions, and CGG/CCG slip-outs show exo-nuclease pauses. The slip-out-specific ligand, naphthyridine-azaquinolone, which induces contractions of expanded repeats in vivo, requires FAN1 for its effect, and protects slip-outs from FAN1 exo-, but not endo-, nucleolytic digestion. FAN1's inchworm pausing of slip-out excision rates is well suited to modify inchworm expansion rates, which modify disease onset and progression.


Assuntos
Transtorno do Espectro Autista/genética , Reparo de Erro de Pareamento de DNA , Endodesoxirribonucleases/metabolismo , Exodesoxirribonucleases/metabolismo , Instabilidade Genômica , Doença de Huntington/genética , Enzimas Multifuncionais/metabolismo , Ataxias Espinocerebelares/genética , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos , Animais , Transtorno do Espectro Autista/enzimologia , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Progressão da Doença , Endodesoxirribonucleases/genética , Exodesoxirribonucleases/genética , Predisposição Genética para Doença , Humanos , Doença de Huntington/enzimologia , Enzimas Multifuncionais/genética , Mutação , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Fenótipo , Ligação Proteica , Células Sf9 , Ataxias Espinocerebelares/enzimologia
3.
J Huntingtons Dis ; 10(1): 95-122, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33579867

RESUMO

FAN1 encodes a DNA repair nuclease. Genetic deficiencies, copy number variants, and single nucleotide variants of FAN1 have been linked to karyomegalic interstitial nephritis, 15q13.3 microdeletion/microduplication syndrome (autism, schizophrenia, and epilepsy), cancer, and most recently repeat expansion diseases. For seven CAG repeat expansion diseases (Huntington's disease (HD) and certain spinocerebellar ataxias), modification of age of onset is linked to variants of specific DNA repair proteins. FAN1 variants are the strongest modifiers. Non-coding disease-delaying FAN1 variants and coding disease-hastening variants (p.R507H and p.R377W) are known, where the former may lead to increased FAN1 levels and the latter have unknown effects upon FAN1 functions. Current thoughts are that ongoing repeat expansions in disease-vulnerable tissues, as individuals age, promote disease onset. Fan1 is required to suppress against high levels of ongoing somatic CAG and CGG repeat expansions in tissues of HD and FMR1 transgenic mice respectively, in addition to participating in DNA interstrand crosslink repair. FAN1 is also a modifier of autism, schizophrenia, and epilepsy. Coupled with the association of these diseases with repeat expansions, this suggests a common mechanism, by which FAN1 modifies repeat diseases. Yet how any of the FAN1 variants modify disease is unknown. Here, we review FAN1 variants, associated clinical effects, protein structure, and the enzyme's attributed functional roles. We highlight how variants may alter its activities in DNA damage response and/or repeat instability. A thorough awareness of the FAN1 gene and FAN1 protein functions will reveal if and how it may be targeted for clinical benefit.


Assuntos
Reparo do DNA/genética , Endodesoxirribonucleases/genética , Exodesoxirribonucleases/genética , Genes Modificadores/genética , Instabilidade Genômica/genética , Doença de Huntington/genética , Enzimas Multifuncionais/genética , Ataxias Espinocerebelares/genética , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos/genética , Animais , Humanos
4.
Nat Genet ; 52(2): 146-159, 2020 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32060489

RESUMO

In many repeat diseases, such as Huntington's disease (HD), ongoing repeat expansions in affected tissues contribute to disease onset, progression and severity. Inducing contractions of expanded repeats by exogenous agents is not yet possible. Traditional approaches would target proteins driving repeat mutations. Here we report a compound, naphthyridine-azaquinolone (NA), that specifically binds slipped-CAG DNA intermediates of expansion mutations, a previously unsuspected target. NA efficiently induces repeat contractions in HD patient cells as well as en masse contractions in medium spiny neurons of HD mouse striatum. Contractions are specific for the expanded allele, independently of DNA replication, require transcription across the coding CTG strand and arise by blocking repair of CAG slip-outs. NA-induced contractions depend on active expansions driven by MutSß. NA injections in HD mouse striatum reduce mutant HTT protein aggregates, a biomarker of HD pathogenesis and severity. Repeat-structure-specific DNA ligands are a novel avenue to contract expanded repeats.


Assuntos
Proteína Huntingtina/genética , Doença de Huntington/genética , Naftiridinas/farmacologia , Quinolonas/farmacologia , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos/efeitos dos fármacos , Animais , Corpo Estriado/efeitos dos fármacos , DNA/metabolismo , Reparo de Erro de Pareamento de DNA/efeitos dos fármacos , Replicação do DNA/efeitos dos fármacos , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Humanos , Proteína Huntingtina/metabolismo , Doença de Huntington/tratamento farmacológico , Doença de Huntington/patologia , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos Transgênicos , Instabilidade de Microssatélites , Mutação , Ribonucleases/metabolismo , Proteína de Ligação a TATA-Box/genética , Transcrição Gênica
5.
J Clin Oncol ; 37(6): 461-470, 2019 02 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30608896

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Constitutional mismatch repair deficiency (CMMRD) is a highly penetrant cancer predisposition syndrome caused by biallelic mutations in mismatch repair (MMR) genes. As several cancer syndromes are clinically similar, accurate diagnosis is critical to cancer screening and treatment. As genetic diagnosis is confounded by 15 or more pseudogenes and variants of uncertain significance, a robust diagnostic assay is urgently needed. We sought to determine whether an assay that directly measures MMR activity could accurately diagnose CMMRD. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In vitro MMR activity was quantified using a 3'-nicked G-T mismatched DNA substrate, which requires MSH2-MSH6 and MLH1-PMS2 for repair. We quantified MMR activity from 20 Epstein-Barr virus-transformed lymphoblastoid cell lines from patients with confirmed CMMRD. We also tested 20 lymphoblastoid cell lines from patients who were suspected for CMMRD. We also characterized MMR activity from patients with neurofibromatosis type 1, Li-Fraumeni syndrome, polymerase proofreading-associated cancer syndrome, and Lynch syndrome. RESULTS: All CMMRD cell lines had low MMR activity (n = 20; mean, 4.14 ± 1.56%) relative to controls (n = 6; mean, 44.00 ± 8.65%; P < .001). Repair was restored by complementation with the missing protein, which confirmed MMR deficiency. All cases of patients with suspected CMMRD were accurately diagnosed. Individuals with Lynch syndrome (n = 28), neurofibromatosis type 1 (n = 5), Li-Fraumeni syndrome (n = 5), and polymerase proofreading-associated cancer syndrome (n = 3) had MMR activity that was comparable to controls. To accelerate testing, we measured MMR activity directly from fresh lymphocytes, which yielded results in 8 days. CONCLUSION: On the basis of the current data set, the in vitro G-T repair assay was able to diagnose CMMRD with 100% specificity and sensitivity. Rapid diagnosis before surgery in non-neoplastic tissues could speed proper therapeutic management.


Assuntos
Biomarcadores Tumorais/genética , Neoplasias Encefálicas/diagnóstico , Neoplasias Encefálicas/genética , Neoplasias Colorretais/diagnóstico , Neoplasias Colorretais/genética , Reparo de Erro de Pareamento de DNA , Enzimas Reparadoras do DNA/genética , Testes Genéticos , Mutação , Síndromes Neoplásicas Hereditárias/diagnóstico , Síndromes Neoplásicas Hereditárias/genética , Biomarcadores Tumorais/metabolismo , Neoplasias Encefálicas/metabolismo , Estudos de Casos e Controles , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Neoplasias Colorretais/metabolismo , Enzimas Reparadoras do DNA/metabolismo , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/genética , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/metabolismo , Predisposição Genética para Doença , Humanos , Endonuclease PMS2 de Reparo de Erro de Pareamento/genética , Endonuclease PMS2 de Reparo de Erro de Pareamento/metabolismo , Proteína 1 Homóloga a MutL/genética , Proteína 1 Homóloga a MutL/metabolismo , Proteína 2 Homóloga a MutS/genética , Proteína 2 Homóloga a MutS/metabolismo , Síndromes Neoplásicas Hereditárias/metabolismo , Fenótipo , Valor Preditivo dos Testes
6.
DNA Repair (Amst) ; 42: 107-18, 2016 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27155933

RESUMO

Typically disease-causing CAG/CTG repeats expand, but rare affected families can display high levels of contraction of the expanded repeat amongst offspring. Understanding instability is important since arresting expansions or enhancing contractions could be clinically beneficial. The MutSß mismatch repair complex is required for CAG/CTG expansions in mice and patients. Oddly, by unknown mechanisms MutSß-deficient mice incur contractions instead of expansions. Replication using CTG or CAG as the lagging strand template is known to cause contractions or expansions respectively; however, the interplay between replication and repair leading to this instability remains unclear. Towards understanding how repeat contractions may arise, we performed in vitro SV40-mediated replication of repeat-containing plasmids in the presence or absence of mismatch repair. Specifically, we separated repair from replication: Replication mediated by MutSß- and MutSα-deficient human cells or cell extracts produced slipped-DNA heteroduplexes in the contraction- but not expansion-biased replication direction. Replication in the presence of MutSß disfavoured the retention of replication products harbouring slipped-DNA heteroduplexes. Post-replication repair of slipped-DNAs by MutSß-proficient extracts eliminated slipped-DNAs. Thus, a MutSß-deficiency likely enhances repeat contractions because MutSß protects against contractions by repairing template strand slip-outs. Replication deficient in LigaseI or PCNA-interaction mutant LigaseI revealed slipped-DNA formation at lagging strands. Our results reveal that distinct mechanisms lead to expansions or contractions and support inhibition of MutSß as a therapeutic strategy to enhance the contraction of expanded repeats.


Assuntos
Replicação do DNA/genética , DNA/genética , Proteína MutS de Ligação de DNA com Erro de Pareamento/deficiência , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos/genética , Animais , Reparo de Erro de Pareamento de DNA , Haplorrinos , Células HeLa , Humanos
7.
Genes Chromosomes Cancer ; 55(2): 131-42, 2016 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26542077

RESUMO

A 4-month-old male infant presented with severe developmental delay, cerebellar, brainstem, and cutaneous hemangiomas, bilateral tumors (vestibular, hypoglossal, cervical, and lumbar spinal), and few café-au-lait macules. Cerebellar and lumbar tumor biopsies revealed venous telangiectasia and intraneural perineuroma, respectively. Sequencing NF1, NF2, and RASA1 (blood), and NF2 and SMARCB1 (lumbar biopsy) was negative for pathogenic mutations. Clinical exome sequencing (CES), requested for tumor syndrome diagnosis, revealed two heterozygous missense variants, c.359T>C;p.Phe120Ser and c.3344G>A;p.Arg1115Gln, in MLH3 (NM_001040108.1), a DNA mismatch repair (MMR) gene, Polyphen-predicted as probably damaging, and benign, respectively. Sanger sequencing confirmed both variants in the proband, and their absence in the mother; biological father unavailable. Both biopsied tissues were negative for microsatellite instability, and expressed MLH1, MSH2, PMS2, MSH6, and MLH3 immunohistochemically. Chromosomal microarray showed a 133 kb segment copy number duplication of 14q12 region encompassing FOXG1, possibly explaining the developmental delay, but not the tumors. The presence of MLH3 variants with multiple benign neural and vascular tumors was intriguing for their possible role in the pathogenesis of these neoplasms, which were suspicious for, but not diagnostic of, constitutional MMR deficiency. However, functional assays of non-neoplastic patient-derived cells showed intact base-base MMR function. Also, no previous FOXG1-aberrant patient was reported with tumors. We now report a 3-year-old FOXG1-duplicated patient with a yet undescribed tumor syndrome with clinical features of neurofibromatosis types I and II, where several validation studies could not ascertain the significance of CES findings; further studies may elucidate precise mechanisms and diagnosis for clinical management, including tumor surveillance.


Assuntos
Encefalopatias/genética , Proteínas de Transporte/genética , Deficiências do Desenvolvimento/genética , Fatores de Transcrição Forkhead/genética , Proteínas do Tecido Nervoso/genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA/métodos , Neoplasias da Coluna Vertebral/genética , Pré-Escolar , Exoma , Duplicação Gênica , Humanos , Lactente , Masculino , Proteínas MutL , Mutação de Sentido Incorreto
8.
Nat Genet ; 47(3): 257-62, 2015 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25642631

RESUMO

DNA replication-associated mutations are repaired by two components: polymerase proofreading and mismatch repair. The mutation consequences of disruption to both repair components in humans are not well studied. We sequenced cancer genomes from children with inherited biallelic mismatch repair deficiency (bMMRD). High-grade bMMRD brain tumors exhibited massive numbers of substitution mutations (>250/Mb), which was greater than all childhood and most cancers (>7,000 analyzed). All ultra-hypermutated bMMRD cancers acquired early somatic driver mutations in DNA polymerase ɛ or δ. The ensuing mutation signatures and numbers are unique and diagnostic of childhood germ-line bMMRD (P < 10(-13)). Sequential tumor biopsy analysis revealed that bMMRD/polymerase-mutant cancers rapidly amass an excess of simultaneous mutations (∼600 mutations/cell division), reaching but not exceeding ∼20,000 exonic mutations in <6 months. This implies a threshold compatible with cancer-cell survival. We suggest a new mechanism of cancer progression in which mutations develop in a rapid burst after ablation of replication repair.


Assuntos
Pareamento Incorreto de Bases , Neoplasias Encefálicas/genética , Reparo de Erro de Pareamento de DNA , Replicação do DNA/genética , Reparo do DNA , DNA Polimerase Dirigida por DNA/genética , Éxons , Mutação em Linhagem Germinativa , Humanos , Instabilidade de Microssatélites
9.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 42(16): 10473-87, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25147206

RESUMO

R-loops, transcriptionally-induced RNA:DNA hybrids, occurring at repeat tracts (CTG)n, (CAG)n, (CGG)n, (CCG)n and (GAA)n, are associated with diseases including myotonic dystrophy, Huntington's disease, fragile X and Friedreich's ataxia. Many of these repeats are bidirectionally transcribed, allowing for single- and double-R-loop configurations, where either or both DNA strands may be RNA-bound. R-loops can trigger repeat instability at (CTG)·(CAG) repeats, but the mechanism of this is unclear. We demonstrate R-loop-mediated instability through processing of R-loops by HeLa and human neuron-like cell extracts. Double-R-loops induced greater instability than single-R-loops. Pre-treatment with RNase H only partially suppressed instability, supporting a model in which R-loops directly generate instability by aberrant processing, or via slipped-DNA formation upon RNA removal and its subsequent aberrant processing. Slipped-DNAs were observed to form following removal of the RNA from R-loops. Since transcriptionally-induced R-loops can occur in the absence of DNA replication, R-loop processing may be a source of repeat instability in the brain. Double-R-loop formation and processing to instability was extended to the expanded C9orf72 (GGGGCC)·(GGCCCC) repeats, known to cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia, providing the first suggestion through which these repeats may become unstable. These findings provide a mechanistic basis for R-loop-mediated instability at disease-associated repeats.


Assuntos
Expansão das Repetições de DNA , Instabilidade Genômica , Proteínas/genética , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos , Proteína C9orf72 , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , DNA/química , DNA/metabolismo , Células HeLa , Humanos , Neurônios/metabolismo , RNA/química , RNA/metabolismo , Ribonuclease H/metabolismo
10.
PLoS Genet ; 9(10): e1003930, 2013 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24204323

RESUMO

The Huntington's disease gene (HTT) CAG repeat mutation undergoes somatic expansion that correlates with pathogenesis. Modifiers of somatic expansion may therefore provide routes for therapies targeting the underlying mutation, an approach that is likely applicable to other trinucleotide repeat diseases. Huntington's disease Hdh(Q111) mice exhibit higher levels of somatic HTT CAG expansion on a C57BL/6 genetic background (B6.Hdh(Q111) ) than on a 129 background (129.Hdh(Q111) ). Linkage mapping in (B6x129).Hdh(Q111) F2 intercross animals identified a single quantitative trait locus underlying the strain-specific difference in expansion in the striatum, implicating mismatch repair (MMR) gene Mlh1 as the most likely candidate modifier. Crossing B6.Hdh(Q111) mice onto an Mlh1 null background demonstrated that Mlh1 is essential for somatic CAG expansions and that it is an enhancer of nuclear huntingtin accumulation in striatal neurons. Hdh(Q111) somatic expansion was also abolished in mice deficient in the Mlh3 gene, implicating MutLγ (MLH1-MLH3) complex as a key driver of somatic expansion. Strikingly, Mlh1 and Mlh3 genes encoding MMR effector proteins were as critical to somatic expansion as Msh2 and Msh3 genes encoding DNA mismatch recognition complex MutSß (MSH2-MSH3). The Mlh1 locus is highly polymorphic between B6 and 129 strains. While we were unable to detect any difference in base-base mismatch or short slipped-repeat repair activity between B6 and 129 MLH1 variants, repair efficiency was MLH1 dose-dependent. MLH1 mRNA and protein levels were significantly decreased in 129 mice compared to B6 mice, consistent with a dose-sensitive MLH1-dependent DNA repair mechanism underlying the somatic expansion difference between these strains. Together, these data identify Mlh1 and Mlh3 as novel critical genetic modifiers of HTT CAG instability, point to Mlh1 genetic variation as the likely source of the instability difference in B6 and 129 strains and suggest that MLH1 protein levels play an important role in driving of the efficiency of somatic expansions.


Assuntos
Proteínas Adaptadoras de Transdução de Sinal/genética , Proteínas de Transporte/genética , Doença de Huntington/genética , Proteínas Nucleares/genética , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos/genética , Animais , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Estudos de Associação Genética , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Instabilidade Genômica , Humanos , Doença de Huntington/patologia , Camundongos , Proteína 1 Homóloga a MutL , Proteínas MutL , RNA Mensageiro
11.
J Biol Chem ; 287(50): 41844-50, 2012 Dec 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23086927

RESUMO

Mismatch repair (MMR) is required for proper maintenance of the genome by protecting against mutations. The mismatch repair system has also been implicated as a driver of certain mutations, including disease-associated trinucleotide repeat instability. We recently revealed a requirement of hMutSß in the repair of short slip-outs containing a single CTG repeat unit (1). The involvement of other MMR proteins in short trinucleotide repeat slip-out repair is unknown. Here we show that hMutLα is required for the highly efficient in vitro repair of single CTG repeat slip-outs, to the same degree as hMutSß. HEK293T cell extracts, deficient in hMLH1, are unable to process single-repeat slip-outs, but are functional when complemented with hMutLα. The MMR-deficient hMLH1 mutant, T117M, which has a point mutation proximal to the ATP-binding domain, is defective in slip-out repair, further supporting a requirement for hMLH1 in the processing of short slip-outs and possibly the involvement of hMHL1 ATPase activity. Extracts of hPMS2-deficient HEC-1-A cells, which express hMLH1, hMLH3, and hPMS1, are only functional when complemented with hMutLα, indicating that neither hMutLß nor hMutLγ is sufficient to repair short slip-outs. The resolution of clustered short slip-outs, which are poorly repaired, was partially dependent upon a functional hMutLα. The joint involvement of hMutSß and hMutLα suggests that repeat instability may be the result of aberrant outcomes of repair attempts.


Assuntos
Enzimas Reparadoras do DNA/metabolismo , Reparo do DNA/fisiologia , Repetições de Trinucleotídeos/fisiologia , Proteínas Adaptadoras de Transdução de Sinal/genética , Proteínas Adaptadoras de Transdução de Sinal/metabolismo , Enzimas Reparadoras do DNA/genética , Células HEK293 , Humanos , Proteína 1 Homóloga a MutL , Proteínas MutL , Proteínas de Neoplasias/genética , Proteínas de Neoplasias/metabolismo , Proteínas Nucleares/genética , Proteínas Nucleares/metabolismo , Mutação Puntual , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína
12.
Hum Mol Genet ; 20(11): 2131-43, 2011 Jun 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21378394

RESUMO

The instability of (CTG)•(CAG) repeats can cause >15 diseases including myotonic dystrophy, DM1. Instability can arise during DNA replication, repair or recombination, where sealing of nicks by DNA ligase I (LIGI) is a final step. The role of LIGI in CTG/CAG instability was determined using in vitro and in vivo approaches. Cell extracts from a human (46BR) harbouring a deficient LIGI (∼3% normal activity) were used to replicate CTG/CAG repeats; and DM1 mice with >300 CTG repeats were crossed with mice harbouring the 46BR LigI. In mice, the defective LigI reduced the frequency of CTG expansions and increased CTG contraction frequencies on female transmissions. Neither male transmissions nor somatic CTG instability was affected by the 46BR LigI - indicating a post-female germline segregation event. Replication-mediated instability was affected by the 46BR LIGI in a manner that depended upon the location of Okazaki fragment initiation relative to the repeat tract; on certain templates, the expansion bias was unaltered by the mutant LIGI, similar to paternal transmissions and somatic tissues; however, a replication fork-shift reduced expansions and increased contractions, similar to maternal transmissions. The presence of contractions in oocytes suggests that the DM1 replication profile specific to pre-meiotic oogenesis replication of maternal alleles is distinct from that occurring in other tissues and, when mediated by the mutant LigI, is predisposed to CTG contractions. Thus, unlike other DNA metabolizing enzymes studied to date, LigI has a highly specific role in CTG repeat maintenance in the maternal germline, involved in mediating CTG expansions and in the avoidance of maternal CTG contractions.


Assuntos
DNA Ligases/metabolismo , Replicação do DNA , Instabilidade Genômica , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos/genética , Alelos , Animais , Linhagem Celular , DNA/genética , DNA Ligase Dependente de ATP , DNA Ligases/genética , Análise Mutacional de DNA , Feminino , Homozigoto , Humanos , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos da Linhagem 129 , Camundongos Endogâmicos BALB C , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Camundongos Transgênicos , Distrofia Miotônica/genética , Oócitos/metabolismo , Fosforilação
13.
Nat Struct Mol Biol ; 17(9): 1079-87, 2010 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20711191

RESUMO

Myotonic dystrophy, caused by DM1 CTG/CAG repeat expansions, shows varying instability levels between tissues and across ages within patients. We determined DNA replication profiles at the DM1 locus in patient fibroblasts and tissues from DM1 transgenic mice of various ages showing different instability. In patient cells, the repeat is flanked by two replication origins demarcated by CTCF sites, with replication diminished at the expansion. In mice, the expansion replicated from only the downstream origin (CAG as lagging template). In testes from mice of three different ages, replication toward the repeat paused at the earliest age and was relieved at later ages-coinciding with increased instability. Brain, pancreas and thymus replication varied with CpG methylation at DM1 CTCF sites. CTCF sites between progressing forks and repeats reduced replication depending on chromatin. Thus, varying replication progression may affect tissue- and age-specific repeat instability.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento , Replicação do DNA , DNA/metabolismo , Distrofia Miotônica/genética , Distrofia Miotônica/metabolismo , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Fator de Ligação a CCCTC , Cromossomos Humanos Par 19 , Ilhas de CpG , Metilação de DNA , Loci Gênicos , Humanos , Camundongos , Camundongos Transgênicos , Especificidade de Órgãos , Proteínas Repressoras/metabolismo
14.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 107(28): 12593-8, 2010 Jul 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20571119

RESUMO

Expansions of CTG/CAG trinucleotide repeats, thought to involve slipped DNAs at the repeats, cause numerous diseases including myotonic dystrophy and Huntington's disease. By unknown mechanisms, further repeat expansions in transgenic mice carrying expanded CTG/CAG tracts require the mismatch repair (MMR) proteins MSH2 and MSH3, forming the MutSbeta complex. Using an in vitro repair assay, we investigated the effect of slip-out size, with lengths of 1, 3, or 20 excess CTG repeats, as well as the effect of the number of slip-outs per molecule, on the requirement for human MMR. Long slip-outs escaped repair, whereas short slip-outs were repaired efficiently, much greater than a G-T mismatch, but required hMutSbeta. Higher or lower levels of hMutSbeta or its complete absence were detrimental to proper repair of short slip-outs. Surprisingly, clusters of as many as 62 short slip-outs (one to three repeat units each) along a single DNA molecule with (CTG)50*(CAG)50 repeats were refractory to repair, and repair efficiency was reduced further without MMR. Consistent with the MutSbeta requirement for instability, hMutSbeta is required to process isolated short slip-outs; however, multiple adjacent short slip-outs block each other's repair, possibly acting as roadblocks to progression of repair and allowing error-prone repair. Results suggest that expansions can arise by escaped repair of long slip-outs, tandem short slip-outs, or isolated short slip-outs; the latter two types are sensitive to hMutSbeta. Poor repair of clustered DNA lesions has previously been associated only with ionizing radiation damage. Our results extend this interference in repair to neurodegenerative disease-causing mutations in which clustered slip-outs escape proper repair and lead to expansions.


Assuntos
Distrofia Miotônica/genética , Repetições de Trinucleotídeos/genética , Animais , Análise por Conglomerados , DNA/genética , DNA/metabolismo , Reparo de Erro de Pareamento de DNA , Humanos , Camundongos , Camundongos Transgênicos , Mutação , Proteínas/genética
15.
DNA Repair (Amst) ; 7(7): 1135-54, 2008 Jul 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18485833

RESUMO

While DNA repair proteins are generally thought to maintain the integrity of the whole genome by correctly repairing mutagenic DNA intermediates, there are cases where DNA "repair" proteins are involved in causing mutations instead. For instance, somatic hypermutation (SHM) and class switch recombination (CSR) require the contribution of various DNA repair proteins, including UNG, MSH2 and MSH6 to mutate certain regions of immunoglobulin genes in order to generate antibodies of increased antigen affinity and altered effector functions. Another instance where "repair" proteins drive mutations is the instability of gene-specific trinucleotide repeats (TNR), the causative mutations of numerous diseases including Fragile X mental retardation syndrome (FRAXA), Huntington's disease (HD), myotonic dystrophy (DM1) and several spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) all of which arise via various modes of pathogenesis. These healthy and deleterious mutations that are induced by repair proteins are distinct from the genome-wide mutations that arise in the absence of repair proteins: they occur at specific loci, are sensitive to cis-elements (sequence context and/or epigenetic marks) and transcription, occur in specific tissues during distinct developmental windows, and are age-dependent. Here we review and compare the mutagenic role of DNA "repair" proteins in the processes of SHM, CSR and TNR instability.


Assuntos
Enzimas Reparadoras do DNA/fisiologia , Reparo do DNA , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/fisiologia , Switching de Imunoglobulina , Hipermutação Somática de Imunoglobulina , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos , Animais , Diversidade de Anticorpos/genética , Humanos , Região de Troca de Imunoglobulinas/genética , Modelos Biológicos , Mutação
16.
Nat Struct Mol Biol ; 12(8): 654-62, 2005 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16025129

RESUMO

Expansion of (CTG)*(CAG) repeats, the cause of 14 or more diseases, is presumed to arise through escaped repair of slipped DNAs. We report the fidelity of slipped-DNA repair using human cell extracts and DNAs with slip-outs of (CAG)(20) or (CTG)(20). Three outcomes occurred: correct repair, escaped repair and error-prone repair. The choice of repair path depended on nick location and slip-out composition (CAG or CTG). A new form of error-prone repair was detected whereby excess repeats were incompletely excised, constituting a previously unknown path to generate expansions but not deletions. Neuron-like cell extracts yielded each of the three repair outcomes, supporting a role for these processes in (CTG)*(CAG) instability in patient post-mitotic brain cells. Mismatch repair (MMR) and nucleotide excision repair (NER) proteins hMSH2, hMSH3, hMLH1, XPF, XPG or polymerase beta were not required-indicating that their role in instability may precede that of slip-out processing. Differential processing of slipped repeats may explain the differences in mutation patterns between various disease loci or tissues.


Assuntos
Extratos Celulares/genética , Enzimas Reparadoras do DNA/metabolismo , Reparo do DNA/genética , Modelos Genéticos , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos/genética , DNA Polimerase Dirigida por DNA/metabolismo , Eletroforese , Doenças Genéticas Inatas/genética , Células HeLa , Humanos , Mutação/genética , Neurônios/citologia , Estatísticas não Paramétricas
17.
J Biol Chem ; 277(16): 13926-34, 2002 Apr 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11832482

RESUMO

The mechanism of disease-associated (CTG)*(CAG) expansion may involve DNA replication slippage, replication direction, Okazaki fragment processing, recombination, or repair. A length-dependent bias for expansions is observed in humans affected by a trinucleotide repeat-associated disease. We developed an assay to test the effect of replication direction on (CTG)*(CAG) instabilities incurred during in vitro (SV40) DNA replication mediated by human cell extracts. This system recapitulates the bias for expansions observed in humans. Replication by HeLa cell extracts generated expansions and deletions that depended upon repeat tract length and the direction of replication. Templates with 79 repeats yielded predominantly expansions (CAG as lagging strand template) or predominantly deletions (CTG as lagging strand template). Templates containing 17 repeats were stable. Thus, replication direction determined the type of mutation. These results provide new insights into the orientation of replication effect upon repeat stability. This system will be useful in determining the contribution of specific human proteins to (CTG)*(CAG) expansions.


Assuntos
DNA/biossíntese , DNA/metabolismo , Deleção de Genes , Expansão das Repetições de Trinucleotídeos , Southern Blotting , Análise Mutacional de DNA , Técnicas Genéticas , Células HeLa , Humanos , Mutação , Plasmídeos/metabolismo , Polimorfismo de Fragmento de Restrição
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA