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1.
PLoS Genet ; 6(3): e1000865, 2010 Mar 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20221259

RESUMO

Thymineless death (TLD) is a classic and enigmatic phenomenon, documented in bacterial, yeast, and human cells, whereby cells lose viability rapidly when deprived of thymine. Despite its being the essential mode of action of important chemotherapeutic agents, and despite having been studied extensively for decades, the basic mechanisms of TLD have remained elusive. In Escherichia coli, several proteins involved in homologous recombination (HR) are required for TLD, however, surprisingly, RecA, the central HR protein and activator of the SOS DNA-damage response was reported not to be. We demonstrate that RecA and the SOS response are required for a substantial fraction of TLD. We show that some of the Rec proteins implicated previously promote TLD via facilitating activation of the SOS response and that, of the roughly 40 proteins upregulated by SOS, SulA, an SOS-inducible inhibitor of cell division, accounts for most or all of how SOS causes TLD. The data imply that much of TLD results from an irreversible cell-cycle checkpoint due to blocked cell division. FISH analyses of the DNA in cells undergoing TLD reveal blocked replication and apparent DNA loss with the region near the replication origin underrepresented initially and the region near the terminus lost later. Models implicating formation of single-strand DNA at blocked replication forks, a SulA-blocked cell cycle, and RecQ/RecJ-catalyzed DNA degradation and HR are discussed. The data predict the importance of DNA damage-response and HR networks to TLD and chemotherapy resistance in humans.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/citologia , Escherichia coli/enzimologia , Viabilidade Microbiana , Recombinases Rec A/metabolismo , Resposta SOS em Genética , Timina/metabolismo , Segregação de Cromossomos , Cromossomos Bacterianos/metabolismo , Replicação do DNA , DNA Topoisomerases Tipo I/metabolismo , DNA Bacteriano/metabolismo , DNA Cruciforme/metabolismo , Modelos Biológicos , Recombinação Genética/genética
2.
Mol Genet Genomic Med ; 6(6): 1199-1208, 2018 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30450770

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Fanconi anemia (FA) affects only one in 130,000 births, but has severe and diverse clinical consequences. It has been theorized that defects in the FA DNA cross-link repair complex lead to a spectrum of variants that are responsible for those diverse clinical phenotypes. METHODS: Using NextGen sequencing, we show that a clinically derived FA cell line had accumulated numerous genetic variants, including high-impact mutations, such as deletion of start codons, introduction of premature stop codons, missense mutations, and INDELs. RESULTS: About 65% of SNPs and 55% of INDELs were found to be commonly present in both the FA dysfunctional and retrovirally corrected cell lines, showing their common origin. The number of INDELs, but not SNPs, is decreased in FANCD2-corrected samples, suggesting that FANCD2 deficiency preferentially promotes the origin of INDELs. These genetic modifications had a considerable effect on the transcriptome, with statistically significant changes in the expression of 270 genes. These genetic and transcriptomic variants significantly impacted pathways and molecular functions, spanning a diverse spectrum of disease phenotypes/symptoms, consistent with the disease diversity seen in FA patients. CONCLUSION: These results underscore the consequences of defects in the DNA cross-link repair mechanism and indicate that accumulating diverse mutations from individual parent cells may make it difficult to anticipate the longitudinal clinical behavior of emerging disease states in an individual with FA.


Assuntos
Proteína do Grupo de Complementação D2 da Anemia de Fanconi/genética , Anemia de Fanconi/genética , Taxa de Mutação , Transcriptoma , Linhagem Celular , Exoma , Humanos
3.
Sci Rep ; 6: 27722, 2016 06 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27278669

RESUMO

The human genome is 99% complete. This study contributes to filling the 1% gap by enriching previously unknown repeat regions called microsatellites (MST). We devised a Global MST Enrichment (GME) kit to enrich and nextgen sequence 2 colorectal cell lines and 16 normal human samples to illustrate its utility in identifying contigs from reads that do not map to the genome reference. The analysis of these samples yielded 790 novel extra-referential concordant contigs that are observed in more than one sample. We searched for evidence of functional elements in the concordant contigs in two ways: (1) BLAST-ing each contig against normal RNA-Seq samples, (2) Checking for predicted functional elements using GlimmerHMM. Of the 790 concordant contigs, 37 had an exact match to at least one RNA-Seq read; 15 aligned to more than 100 RNA-Seq reads. Of the 249 concordant contigs predicted by GlimmerHMM to have functional elements, 6 had at least one exact RNA-Seq match. BLAST-ing these novel contigs against all publically available sequences confirmed that they were found in human and chimpanzee BAC and FOSMID clones sequenced as part of the original human genome project. These extra-referential contigs predominantly contained pentameric repeats, especially two motifs: AATGG and GTGGA.


Assuntos
Repetições de Microssatélites , Análise de Sequência de DNA/métodos , Análise de Sequência de RNA/métodos , Algoritmos , Animais , Linhagem Celular , Mapeamento de Sequências Contíguas , Genoma Humano , Genômica , Humanos , Pan troglodytes/genética
4.
Oncotarget ; 6(13): 11407-20, 2015 May 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25779658

RESUMO

Ovarian cancer (OV) ranks fifth in cancer deaths among women, yet there remain few informative biomarkers for this disease. Microsatellites are repetitive genomic regions which we hypothesize could be a source of novel biomarkers for OV and have traditionally been under-appreciated relative to Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs). In this study, we explore microsatellite variation as a potential novel source of genomic variation associated with OV. Exomes from 305 OV patient germline samples and 54 tumors, sequenced as part of The Cancer Genome Atlas, were analyzed for microsatellite variation and compared to healthy females sequenced as part of the 1,000 Genomes Project. We identified a subset of 60 microsatellite loci with genotypes that varied significantly between the OV and healthy female populations. Using these loci as a signature set, we classified germline genomes as 'at risk' for OV with a sensitivity of 90.1% and a specificity of 87.6%. Cross-analysis with a similar set of breast cancer associated loci identified individuals 'at risk' for both diseases. This study revealed a genotype-based microsatellite signature present in the germlines of individuals diagnosed with OV, and provides the basis for a potential novel risk assessment diagnostic for OV and new personal genomics targets in tumors.


Assuntos
Biomarcadores Tumorais/genética , Variação Genética , Genética Populacional , Repetições de Microssatélites , Neoplasias Ovarianas/genética , Área Sob a Curva , Estudos de Casos e Controles , Biologia Computacional , Bases de Dados Genéticas , Exoma , Feminino , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Estudos de Associação Genética , Predisposição Genética para Doença , Genética Populacional/métodos , Humanos , Neoplasias Ovarianas/patologia , Fenótipo , Medicina de Precisão , Valor Preditivo dos Testes , Prognóstico , Curva ROC , Medição de Risco , Fatores de Risco
5.
PLoS One ; 9(11): e110263, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25402475

RESUMO

Microsatellites (MST), tandem repeats of 1-6 nucleotide motifs, are mutational hot-spots with a bias for insertions and deletions (INDELs) rather than single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). The majority of MST instability studies are limited to a small number of loci, the Bethesda markers, which are only informative for a subset of colorectal cancers. In this paper we evaluate non-haplotype alleles present within next-gen sequencing data to evaluate somatic MST variation (SMV) within DNA repair proficient and DNA repair defective cell lines. We confirm that alleles present within next-gen data that do not contribute to the haplotype can be reliably quantified and utilized to evaluate the SMV without requiring comparisons of matched samples. We observed that SMV patterns found in DNA repair proficient cell lines without DNA repair defects, MCF10A, HEK293 and PD20 RV:D2, had consistent patterns among samples. Further, we were able to confirm that changes in SMV patterns in cell lines lacking functional BRCA2, FANCD2 and mismatch repair were consistent with the different pathways perturbed. Using this new exome sequencing analysis approach we show that DNA instability can be identified in a sample and that patterns of instability vary depending on the impaired DNA repair mechanism, and that genes harboring minor alleles are strongly associated with cancer pathways. The MST Minor Allele Caller used for this study is available at https://github.com/zalmanv/MST_minor_allele_caller.


Assuntos
Distúrbios no Reparo do DNA/genética , Reparo do DNA , Exoma , Variação Genética , Repetições de Microssatélites , Alelos , Linhagem Celular , Cromossomos Humanos Par 1 , Feminino , Loci Gênicos , Haplótipos , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala/métodos , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala/normas , Humanos , Mutação INDEL , Masculino , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
6.
DNA Repair (Amst) ; 12(11): 993-9, 2013 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24075571

RESUMO

Thymineless death (TLD) is the rapid loss of colony-forming ability in bacterial, yeast and human cells starved for thymine, and is the mechanism of action of common chemotherapeutic drugs. In Escherichia coli, significant loss of viability during TLD requires the SOS replication-stress/DNA-damage response, specifically its role in inducing the inhibitor of cell division, SulA. An independent RecQ- and RecJ-dependent TLD pathway accounts for a similarly large additional component of TLD, and a third SOS- and RecQ/J-independent TLD pathway has also been observed. Although two groups have implicated the SOS-response in TLD, an SOS-deficient mutant strain from an earlier study was found to be sensitive to thymine deprivation. We performed whole-genome resequencing on that SOS-deficient strain and find that, compared with the SOS-proficient control strain, it contains five mutations in addition to the SOS-blocking lexA(Ind(-)) mutation. One of the additional mutations, csrA, confers TLD sensitivity specifically in SOS-defective strains. We find that CsrA, a carbon storage regulator, reduces TLD in SOS- or SulA-defective cells, and that the increased TLD that occurs in csrA(-) SOS-defective cells is dependent on RecQ. We consider a hypothesis in which the modulation of nucleotide pools by CsrA might inhibit TLD specifically in SOS-deficient (SulA-deficient) cells.


Assuntos
Proteínas de Escherichia coli/genética , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/fisiologia , Proteínas de Ligação a RNA/genética , Proteínas de Ligação a RNA/metabolismo , Proteínas Repressoras/genética , Proteínas Repressoras/metabolismo , Resposta SOS em Genética , Timina/metabolismo , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Dano ao DNA , Reparo do DNA , DNA Bacteriano/genética , DNA Bacteriano/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/enzimologia , Genoma Bacteriano , Viabilidade Microbiana , Mutação de Sentido Incorreto , Recombinação Genética , Serina Endopeptidases/metabolismo
7.
J Mol Microbiol Biotechnol ; 21(1-2): 36-44, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22248541

RESUMO

Evolution hinges on the ability of organisms to adapt to their environment. A key regulator of adaptability is mutation rate, which must be balanced to maintain genome fidelity while permitting sufficient plasticity to cope with environmental changes. Multiple mechanisms govern an organism's mutation rate. Constitutive mechanisms include mutator alleles that drive global, permanent increases in mutation rates, but these changes are confined to the subpopulation that carries the mutator allele. Other mechanisms focus mutagenesis in time and space to improve the chances that adaptive mutations can spread through the population. For example, environmental stress can induce mechanisms that transiently relax the fidelity of DNA repair to bring about a temporary increase in mutation rates during times when an organism experiences a reduced fitness for its surroundings, as has been demonstrated for double-strand break repair in Escherichia coli. Still, other mechanisms control the spatial distribution of mutations by directing changes to especially mutable sequences in the genome. In eukaryotic cells, for example, the stress-sensitive chaperone Hsp90 can regulate the length of trinucleotide repeats to fine-tune gene function and can regulate the mobility of transposable elements to enable larger functional changes. Here, we review the regulation of mutation rate, with special emphasis on the roles of tandem repeats and environmental stress in genome evolution.


Assuntos
Adaptação Biológica , Escherichia coli/fisiologia , Mutação , Sequências Repetitivas de Ácido Nucleico , Estresse Fisiológico , Escherichia coli/genética , Evolução Molecular , Genoma Bacteriano , Seleção Genética
8.
Genetics ; 189(1): 23-36, 2011 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21705756

RESUMO

Thymineless death (TLD) is the rapid loss of viability in bacterial, yeast, and human cells starved of thymine. TLD is the mode of action of common anticancer drugs and some antibiotics. TLD in Escherichia coli is accompanied by blocked replication and chromosomal DNA loss and recent work identified activities of recombination protein RecA and the SOS DNA-damage response as causes of TLD. Here, we examine the basis of hypersensitivity to thymine deprivation (hyper-TLD) in mutants that lack the UvrD helicase, which opposes RecA action and participates in some DNA repair mechanisms, RecBCD exonuclease, which degrades double-stranded linear DNA and works with RecA in double-strand-break repair and SOS induction, and RuvABC Holliday-junction resolvase. We report that hyper-TLD in uvrD cells is partly RecA dependent and cannot be attributed to accumulation of intermediates in mismatch repair or nucleotide-excision repair. These data imply that both its known role in opposing RecA and an additional as-yet-unknown function of UvrD promote TLD resistance. The hyper-TLD of ruvABC cells requires RecA but not RecQ or RecJ. The hyper-TLD of recB cells requires neither RecA nor RecQ, implying that neither recombination nor SOS induction causes hyper-TLD in recB cells, and RecQ is not the sole source of double-strand ends (DSEs) during TLD, as previously proposed; models are suggested. These results define pathways by which cells resist TLD and suggest strategies for combating TLD resistance during chemotherapies.


Assuntos
DNA Helicases/metabolismo , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Timina/metabolismo , DNA Helicases/genética , Reparo do DNA , Escherichia coli/genética , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/genética , Exodesoxirribonucleases/metabolismo , Regulação Bacteriana da Expressão Gênica , Redes e Vias Metabólicas , Recombinases/metabolismo , Recombinação Genética , Resposta SOS em Genética
9.
DNA Repair (Amst) ; 9(4): 403-13, 2010 Apr 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20138014

RESUMO

Maintenance of genomic stability is critical for all cells. Homologous recombination (HR) pathways promote genome stability using evolutionarily conserved proteins such as RecA, SSB, and RecQ, the Escherichia coli homologue of five human proteins at least three of which suppress genome instability and cancer. A previous report indicated that RecQ promotes the net accumulation in cells of intermolecular HR intermediates (IRIs), a net effect opposite that of the yeast and two human RecQ homologues. Here we extend those conclusions. We demonstrate that cells that lack both UvrD, an inhibitor of RecA-mediated strand exchange, and RecG, a DNA helicase implicated in IRI resolution, are inviable. We show that the uvrD recG cells die a "death-by-recombination" in which IRIs accumulate blocking chromosome segregation. First, their death requires RecA HR protein. Second, the death is accompanied by cytogenetically visible failure to segregate chromosomes. Third, FISH analyses show that the unsegregated chromosomes have completed replication, supporting the hypothesis that unresolved IRIs prevented the segregation. Fourth, we show that RecQ and induction of the SOS response are required for the accumulation of replicated, unsegregated chromosomes and death, as are RecF, RecO, and RecJ. ExoI exonuclease and MutL mismatch-repair protein are partially required. This set of genes is similar but not identical to those that promote death-by-recombination of DeltauvrD Deltaruv cells. The data support models in which RecQ promotes the net accumulation in cells of IRIs and RecG promotes resolution of IRIs that form via pathways not wholly identical to those that produce the IRIs resolved by RuvABC. This implies that RecG resolves intermediates other than or in addition to standard Holliday junctions resolved by RuvABC. The role of RecQ in net accumulation of IRIs may be shared by one or more of its human homologues.


Assuntos
DNA Helicases/metabolismo , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/genética , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , RecQ Helicases/metabolismo , Recombinação Genética , DNA Helicases/genética , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/genética , Mutação
10.
PLoS One ; 5(5): e10862, 2010 May 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20523737

RESUMO

Escherichia coli has five DNA polymerases, one of which, the low-fidelity Pol IV or DinB, is required for stress-induced mutagenesis in the well-studied Lac frameshift-reversion assay. Although normally present at approximately 200 molecules per cell, Pol IV is recruited to acts of DNA double-strand-break repair, and causes mutagenesis, only when at least two cellular stress responses are activated: the SOS DNA-damage response, which upregulates DinB approximately 10-fold, and the RpoS-controlled general-stress response, which upregulates Pol IV about 2-fold. DNA Pol III was also implicated but its role in mutagenesis was unclear. We sought in vivo evidence on the presence and interactions of multiple DNA polymerases during stress-induced mutagenesis. Using multiply mutant strains, we provide evidence of competition of DNA Pols I, II and III with Pol IV, implying that they are all present at sites of stress-induced mutagenesis. Previous data indicate that Pol V is also present. We show that the interactions of Pols I, II and III with Pol IV result neither from, first, induction of the SOS response when particular DNA polymerases are removed, nor second, from proofreading of DNA Pol IV errors by the editing functions of Pol I or Pol III. Third, we provide evidence that Pol III itself does not assist with but rather inhibits Pol IV-dependent mutagenesis. The data support the remaining hypothesis that during the acts of DNA double-strand-break (DSB) repair, shown previously to underlie stress-induced mutagenesis in the Lac system, there is competition of DNA polymerases I, II and III with DNA Pol IV for action at the primer terminus. Up-regulation of Pol IV, and possibly other stress-response-controlled factor(s), tilt the competition in favor of error-prone Pol IV at the expense of more accurate polymerases, thus producing stress-induced mutations. This mutagenesis assay reveals the DNA polymerases operating in DSB repair during stress and also provides a sensitive indicator for DNA polymerase competition and choice in vivo.


Assuntos
DNA Polimerase Dirigida por DNA/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/citologia , Escherichia coli/enzimologia , Estresse Fisiológico , Quebras de DNA de Cadeia Dupla , DNA Polimerase I/química , DNA Polimerase I/metabolismo , DNA Polimerase II/metabolismo , DNA Polimerase III/metabolismo , DNA Polimerase beta/metabolismo , Reparo do DNA/genética , Escherichia coli/genética , Proteínas de Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Mutação da Fase de Leitura/genética , Modelos Biológicos , Mutagênese/genética , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Resposta SOS em Genética/genética , Serina Endopeptidases/metabolismo
11.
Mol Cell ; 19(6): 791-804, 2005 Sep 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16168374

RESUMO

Special mechanisms of mutation are induced in microbes under growth-limiting stress causing genetic instability, including occasional adaptive mutations that may speed evolution. Both the mutation mechanisms and their control by stress have remained elusive. We provide evidence that the molecular basis for stress-induced mutagenesis in an E. coli model is error-prone DNA double-strand break repair (DSBR). I-SceI-endonuclease-induced DSBs strongly activate stress-induced mutations near the DSB, but not globally. The same proteins are required as for cells without induced DSBs: DSBR proteins, DinB-error-prone polymerase, and the RpoS starvation-stress-response regulator. Mutation is promoted by homology between cut and uncut DNA molecules, supporting a homology-mediated DSBR mechanism. DSBs also promote gene amplification. Finally, DSBs activate mutation only during stationary phase/starvation but will during exponential growth if RpoS is expressed. Our findings reveal an RpoS-controlled switch from high-fidelity to mutagenic DSBR under stress. This limits genetic instability both in time and to localized genome regions, potentially important evolutionary strategies.


Assuntos
Dano ao DNA , Reparo do DNA , Mutação Puntual , Sequência de Bases , DNA Helicases/genética , DNA Helicases/metabolismo , Desoxirribonucleases de Sítio Específico do Tipo II/genética , Desoxirribonucleases de Sítio Específico do Tipo II/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/genética , Proteínas de Escherichia coli , Evolução Molecular , Óperon Lac , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Mutagênese , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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