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result(s) for
"Tomkinson, Alan E."
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Mutant FUS causes DNA ligation defects to inhibit oxidative damage repair in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
2018
Genome damage and defective repair are etiologically linked to neurodegeneration. However, the specific mechanisms involved remain enigmatic. Here, we identify defects in DNA nick ligation and oxidative damage repair in a subset of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients. These defects are caused by mutations in the RNA/DNA-binding protein FUS. In healthy neurons, FUS protects the genome by facilitating PARP1-dependent recruitment of XRCC1/DNA Ligase IIIα (LigIII) to oxidized genome sites and activating LigIII via direct interaction. We discover that loss of nuclear FUS caused DNA nick ligation defects in motor neurons due to reduced recruitment of XRCC1/LigIII to DNA strand breaks. Moreover, DNA ligation defects in ALS patient-derived iPSC lines carrying FUS mutations and in motor neurons generated therefrom are rescued by CRISPR/Cas9-mediated correction of mutation. Our findings uncovered a pathway of defective DNA ligation in FUS-linked ALS and suggest that LigIII-targeted therapies may prevent or slow down disease progression.
Impairment of DNA repair has been associated with neurodegeneration. Here the authors investigate the mechanisms of defects in repair caused by mutations in the RNA/DNA binding protein FUS in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and elucidate its role in the DNA ligation during DNA single-strand break repair of oxidative breaks.
Journal Article
FUS unveiled in mitochondrial DNA repair and targeted ligase-1 expression rescues repair-defects in FUS-linked motor neuron disease
2024
This study establishes the physiological role of Fused in Sarcoma (FUS) in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) repair and highlights its implications to the pathogenesis of FUS-associated neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Endogenous FUS interacts with and recruits mtDNA Ligase IIIα (mtLig3) to DNA damage sites within mitochondria, a relationship essential for maintaining mtDNA repair and integrity in healthy cells. Using ALS patient-derived FUS mutant cell lines, a transgenic mouse model, and human autopsy samples, we discovered that compromised FUS functionality hinders mtLig3’s repair role, resulting in increased mtDNA damage and mutations. These alterations cause various manifestations of mitochondrial dysfunction, particularly under stress conditions relevant to disease pathology. Importantly, rectifying FUS mutations in patient-derived induced pluripotent cells (iPSCs) preserves mtDNA integrity. Similarly, targeted introduction of human DNA Ligase 1 restores repair mechanisms and mitochondrial activity in FUS mutant cells, suggesting a potential therapeutic approach. Our findings unveil FUS’s critical role in mitochondrial health and mtDNA repair, offering valuable insights into the mechanisms underlying mitochondrial dysfunction in FUS-associated motor neuron disease.
Dysfunction of Fused in Sarcoma (FUS) leads to increased mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage, mutations, and mitochondrial dysfunction. This study shows that FUS collaborates with mtDNA Ligase IIIα to maintain mtDNA repair and integrity.
Journal Article
The zinc finger of DNA ligase 3α binds to nucleosomes via an arginine anchor
2025
Ligation of DNA single strand breaks is critical for maintaining genome integrity during DNA replication and repair. DNA Ligase III (LIG3α) forms an important complex with X-ray cross complementing protein 1 (XRCC1) during single strand break and base excision repair. We utilize a real time single molecule approach to quantify DNA binding kinetics of HaloTag-LIG3α and XRCC1-YFP from nuclear extracts on long DNA substrates containing nicks, nucleosomes or nicks embedded in nucleosomes. LIG3α displays higher affinity for nicks than XRCC1 with the LIG3α catalytic core and N-terminal zinc finger (ZnF) competing for nick engagement. Surprisingly, compared to single strand breaks in naked DNA, LIG3α binds even more avidly to an undamaged nucleosome reconstituted on the 601-sequence, with binding dependent on two arginine residues in the N-terminal ZnF. These studies reveal insights into nick detection and identify an arginine anchor mechanism for LIG3α engagement with nucleosomes.
LIG3α forms a complex with XRCC1 during single strand break and base excision repair. Here, the authors show that LIG3α displays higher affinity for nicks than XRCC1 and binds with its N-terminal ZnF domain more avidly to an undamaged nucleosome.
Journal Article
Unchanged PCNA and DNMT1 dynamics during replication in DNA ligase I-deficient cells but abnormal chromatin levels of non-replicative histone H1
2023
DNA ligase I (LigI), the predominant enzyme that joins Okazaki fragments, interacts with PCNA and Pol δ. LigI also interacts with UHRF1, linking Okazaki fragment joining with DNA maintenance methylation. Okazaki fragments can also be joined by a relatively poorly characterized DNA ligase IIIα (LigIIIα)-dependent backup pathway. Here we examined the effect of LigI-deficiency on proteins at the replication fork. Notably, LigI-deficiency did not alter the kinetics of association of the PCNA clamp, the leading strand polymerase Pol ε, DNA maintenance methylation proteins and core histones with newly synthesized DNA. While the absence of major changes in replication and methylation proteins is consistent with the similar proliferation rate and DNA methylation levels of the
LIG1
null cells compared with the parental cells, the increased levels of LigIIIα/XRCC1 and Pol δ at the replication fork and in bulk chromatin indicate that there are subtle replication defects in the absence of LigI. Interestingly, the non-replicative histone H1 variant, H1.0, is enriched in the chromatin of LigI-deficient mouse CH12F3 and human 46BR.1G1 cells. This alteration was not corrected by expression of wild type LigI, suggesting that it is a relatively stable epigenetic change that may contribute to the immunodeficiencies linked with inherited LigI-deficiency syndrome.
Journal Article
Prereplicative repair of oxidized bases in the human genome is mediated by NEIL1 DNA glycosylase together with replication proteins
by
Tapas K. Hazra
,
Alan E. Tomkinson
,
Larry J. Bellot
in
Biological Sciences
,
Blotting, Western
,
Bromodeoxyuridine
2013
Base oxidation by endogenous and environmentally induced reactive oxygen species preferentially occurs in replicating single-stranded templates in mammalian genomes, warranting prereplicative repair of the mutagenic base lesions. It is not clear how such lesions (which, unlike bulky adducts, do not block replication) are recognized for repair. Furthermore, strand breaks caused by base excision from ssDNA by DNA glycosylases, including Nei-like (NEIL) 1, would generate double-strand breaks during replication, which are not experimentally observed. NEIL1, whose deficiency causes a mutator phenotype and is activated during the S phase, is present in the DNA replication complex isolated from human cells, with enhanced association with DNA in S-phase cells and colocalization with replication foci containing DNA replication proteins. Furthermore, NEIL1 binds to 5-hydroxyuracil, the oxidative deamination product of C, in replication protein A-coated ssDNA template and inhibits DNA synthesis by DNA polymerase δ. We postulate that, upon encountering an oxidized base during replication, NEIL1 initiates prereplicative repair by acting as a “cowcatcher” and preventing nascent chain growth. Regression of the stalled replication fork, possibly mediated by annealing helicases, then allows lesion repair in the reannealed duplex. This model is supported by our observations that NEIL1, whose deficiency slows nascent chain growth in oxidatively stressed cells, is stimulated by replication proteins in vitro. Furthermore, deficiency of the closely related NEIL2 alone does not affect chain elongation, but combined NEIL1/2 deficiency further inhibits DNA replication. These results support a mechanism of NEIL1-mediated prereplicative repair of oxidized bases in the replicating strand, with NEIL2 providing a backup function.
Journal Article
Human DNA ligase I completely encircles and partially unwinds nicked DNA
by
Ellenberger, Tom
,
O'Brien, Patrick J.
,
Tomkinson, Alan E.
in
Binding Sites
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
Crystalline structure
2004
The end-joining reaction catalysed by DNA ligases is required by all organisms and serves as the ultimate step of DNA replication, repair and recombination processes. One of three well characterized mammalian DNA ligases, DNA ligase I, joins Okazaki fragments during DNA replication. Here we report the crystal structure of human DNA ligase I (residues 233 to 919) in complex with a nicked, 5′ adenylated DNA intermediate. The structure shows that the enzyme redirects the path of the double helix to expose the nick termini for the strand-joining reaction. It also reveals a unique feature of mammalian ligases: a DNA-binding domain that allows ligase I to encircle its DNA substrate, stabilizes the DNA in a distorted structure, and positions the catalytic core on the nick. Similarities in the toroidal shape and dimensions of DNA ligase I and the proliferating cell nuclear antigen sliding clamp are suggestive of an extensive protein–protein interface that may coordinate the joining of Okazaki fragments.
Journal Article
Structural basis of long-range to short-range synaptic transition in NHEJ
2021
DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are a highly cytotoxic form of DNA damage and the incorrect repair of DSBs is linked to carcinogenesis
1
,
2
. The conserved error-prone non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) pathway has a key role in determining the effects of DSB-inducing agents that are used to treat cancer as well as the generation of the diversity in antibodies and T cell receptors
2
,
3
. Here we applied single-particle cryo-electron microscopy to visualize two key DNA–protein complexes that are formed by human NHEJ factors. The Ku70/80 heterodimer (Ku), the catalytic subunit of the DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs), DNA ligase IV (LigIV), XRCC4 and XLF form a long-range synaptic complex, in which the DNA ends are held approximately 115 Å apart. Two DNA end-bound subcomplexes comprising Ku and DNA-PKcs are linked by interactions between the DNA-PKcs subunits and a scaffold comprising LigIV, XRCC4, XLF, XRCC4 and LigIV. The relative orientation of the DNA-PKcs molecules suggests a mechanism for autophosphorylation in
trans
, which leads to the dissociation of DNA-PKcs and the transition into the short-range synaptic complex. Within this complex, the Ku-bound DNA ends are aligned for processing and ligation by the XLF-anchored scaffold, and a single catalytic domain of LigIV is stably associated with a nick between the two Ku molecules, which suggests that the joining of both strands of a DSB involves both LigIV molecules.
Double-strand DNA break repair by the non-homologous end joining pathway involves the transition from a complex that bridges the DNA ends to a complex that aligns the DNA for ligation through the dissociation of the kinase subunits of the DNA-PK complexes.
Journal Article
Role of Dnl4–Lif1 in nonhomologous end-joining repair complex assembly and suppression of homologous recombination
by
Kwon, Youngho
,
Sung, Patrick
,
Tomkinson, Alan E
in
Biochemistry
,
Biological Microscopy
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2007
Nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) eliminates DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) in bacteria and eukaryotes. In
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
, there are pairwise physical interactions among the core complexes of the NHEJ pathway, namely Yku70–Yku80 (Ku), Dnl4–Lif1 and Mre11–Rad50–Xrs2 (MRX). However, MRX also has a key role in the repair of DSBs by homologous recombination (HR). Here we have examined the assembly of NHEJ complexes at DSBs biochemically and by chromatin immunoprecipitation. Ku first binds to the DNA end and then recruits Dnl4–Lif1. Notably, Dnl4–Lif1 stabilizes the binding of Ku to
in vivo
DSBs. Ku and Dnl4–Lif1 not only initiate formation of the nucleoprotein NHEJ complex but also attenuate HR by inhibiting DNA end resection. Therefore, Dnl4–Lif1 plays an important part in determining repair pathway choice by participating at an early stage of DSB engagement in addition to providing the DNA ligase activity that completes NHEJ.
Journal Article
Mycobacterial Ku and Ligase Proteins Constitute a Two-Component NHEJ Repair Machine
by
Palmbos, Phillip L.
,
Tonkin, Louise M.
,
Doherty, Aidan J.
in
Bacterial Proteins - chemistry
,
Bacterial Proteins - genetics
,
Bacterial Proteins - metabolism
2004
In mammalian cells, repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) by nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) is critical for genome stability. Although the end-bridging and ligation steps of NHEJ have been reconstituted in vitro, little is known about the end-processing reactions that occur before ligation. Recently, functionally homologous end-bridging and ligation activities have been identified in prokarya. Consistent with its homology to polymerases and nucleases, we demonstrate that DNA ligase D from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mt-Lig) possesses a unique variety of nucleotidyl transferase activities, including gap-filling polymerase, terminal transferase, and primase, and is also a 3' to 5' exonuclease. These enzyme activities allow the Mt-Ku and Mt-Lig proteins to join incompatible DSB ends in vitro, as well as to reconstitute NHEJ in vivo in yeast. These results demonstrate that prokaryotic Ku and ligase form a bona fide NHEJ system that encodes all the recognition, processing, and ligation activities required for DSB repair.
Journal Article
An Interaction between DNA Ligase I and Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen: Implications for Okazaki Fragment Synthesis and Joining
by
Levin, David S.
,
Tomkinson, Alan E.
,
Yao, Nina
in
Biochemistry
,
Biological Sciences
,
Cellular biology
1997
Although three human genes encoding DNA ligases have been isolated, the molecular mechanisms by which these gene products specifically participate in different DNA transactions are not well understood. In this study, fractionation of a HeLa nuclear extract by DNA ligase I affinity chromatography resulted in the specific retention of a replication protein, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), by the affinity resin. Subsequent experiments demonstrated that DNA ligase I and PCNA interact directly via the amino-terminal 118 aa of DNA ligase I, the same region of DNA ligase I that is required for localization of this enzyme at replication foci during S phase. PCNA, which forms a sliding clamp around duplex DNA, interacts with DNA pol δ and enables this enzyme to synthesize DNA processively. An interaction between DNA ligase I and PCNA that is topologically linked to DNA was detected. However, DNA ligase I inhibited PCNA-dependent DNA synthesis by DNA pol δ . These observations suggest that a ternary complex of DNA ligase I, PCNA and DNA pol δ does not form on a gapped DNA template. Consistent with this idea, the cell cycle inhibitor p21, which also interacts with PCNA and inhibits processive DNA synthesis by DNA pol δ , disrupts the DNA ligase I-PCNA complex. Thus, we propose that after Okazaki fragment DNA synthesis is completed by a PCNA-DNA pol δ complex, DNA pol δ is released, allowing DNA ligase I to bind to PCNA at the nick between adjacent Okazaki fragments and catalyze phosphodiester bond formation.
Journal Article