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result(s) for
"DNA - physiology"
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Distinct structural features of TFAM drive mitochondrial DNA packaging versus transcriptional activation
2014
TFAM (transcription factor A, mitochondrial) is a DNA-binding protein that activates transcription at the two major promoters of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)—the light strand promoter (LSP) and the heavy strand promoter 1 (HSP1). Equally important, it coats and packages the mitochondrial genome. TFAM has been shown to impose a U-turn on LSP DNA; however, whether this distortion is relevant at other sites is unknown. Here we present crystal structures of TFAM bound to HSP1 and to nonspecific DNA. In both, TFAM similarly distorts the DNA into a U-turn. Yet, TFAM binds to HSP1 in the opposite orientation from LSP explaining why transcription from LSP requires DNA bending, whereas transcription at HSP1 does not. Moreover, the crystal structures reveal dimerization of DNA-bound TFAM. This dimerization is dispensable for DNA bending and transcriptional activation but is important in DNA compaction. We propose that TFAM dimerization enhances mitochondrial DNA compaction by promoting looping of the DNA.
The mitochondrial transcription factor TFAM is a multifunctional DNA-binding protein essential for transcriptional regulation and mitochondrial DNA organization. Here, Ngo
et al.
present two novel crystal structures that provide additional mechanistic insight into how TFAM performs its diverse functions.
Journal Article
Translesion polymerase eta both facilitates DNA replication and promotes increased human genetic variation at common fragile sites
by
Twayana, Shyam
,
Drosopoulos, William C.
,
Bacolla, Albino
in
Biological Sciences
,
Cell Biology
,
Cell Line
2021
Common fragile sites (CFSs) are difficult-to-replicate genomic regions that form gaps and breaks on metaphase chromosomes under replication stress. They are hotspots for chromosomal instability in cancer. Repetitive sequences located at CFS loci are inefficiently copied by replicative DNA polymerase (Pol) delta. However, translesion synthesis Pol eta has been shown to efficiently polymerize CFS-associated repetitive sequences in vitro and facilitate CFS stability by a mechanism that is not fully understood. Here, by locusspecific, single-molecule replication analysis, we identified a crucial role for Pol eta (encoded by the gene POLH) in the in vivo replication of CFSs, even without exogenous stress. We find that Pol eta deficiency induces replication pausing, increases initiation events, and alters the direction of replication-fork progression at CFS-FRA16D in both lymphoblasts and fibroblasts. Furthermore, certain replication pause sites at CFS-FRA16D were associated with the presence of non-B DNA-forming motifs, implying that non-B DNA structures could increase replication hindrance in the absence of Pol eta. Further, in Pol eta-deficient fibroblasts, there was an increase in fork pausing at fibroblast-specific CFSs. Importantly, while not all pause sites were associated with non-B DNA structures, they were embedded within regions of increased genetic variation in the healthy human population, with mutational spectra consistent with Pol eta activity. From these findings, we propose that Pol eta replicating through CFSs may result in genetic variations found in the human population at these sites.
Journal Article
Ubiquitinated-PCNA protects replication forks from DNA2-mediated degradation by regulating Okazaki fragment maturation and chromatin assembly
2020
Upon genotoxic stress, PCNA ubiquitination allows for replication of damaged DNA by recruiting lesion-bypass DNA polymerases. However, PCNA is also ubiquitinated during normal S-phase progression. By employing 293T and RPE1 cells deficient in PCNA ubiquitination, generated through CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing, here, we show that this modification promotes cellular proliferation and suppression of genomic instability under normal growth conditions. Loss of PCNA-ubiquitination results in DNA2-dependent but MRE11-independent nucleolytic degradation of nascent DNA at stalled replication forks. This degradation is linked to defective gap-filling in the wake of the replication fork and incomplete Okazaki fragment maturation, which interferes with efficient PCNA unloading by ATAD5 and subsequent nucleosome deposition by CAF-1. Moreover, concomitant loss of PCNA-ubiquitination and the BRCA pathway results in increased nascent DNA degradation and PARP inhibitor sensitivity. In conclusion, we show that by ensuring efficient Okazaki fragment maturation, PCNA-ubiquitination protects fork integrity and promotes the resistance of BRCA-deficient cells to PARP-inhibitors.
PCNA is essential for DNA replication and cellular proliferation. Here, the authors reveal that PCNA ubiquitination protects stalled replication forks from DNA2-mediated degradation via regulation of Okazaki fragment maturation and chromatin assembly.
Journal Article
Repriming of DNA synthesis at stalled replication forks by human PrimPol
by
Blanco, Luis
,
García-Gómez, Sara
,
Rodriguez-Acebes, Sara
in
631/337/151/2356
,
Biochemistry
,
Biological Microscopy
2013
DNA damage that causes replication forks to stall can be bypassed via translesion synthesis (TLS). New work has identified a bifunctional human primase and TLS polymerase, PrimPol, that reinitiates DNA synthesis beyond the damage site by virtue of its unique primase activity, revealing a novel pathway of DNA-damage tolerance.
DNA replication forks that collapse during the process of genomic duplication lead to double-strand breaks and constitute a threat to genomic stability. The risk of fork collapse is higher in the presence of replication inhibitors or after UV irradiation, which introduces specific modifications in the structure of DNA. In these cases, fork progression may be facilitated by error-prone translesion synthesis (TLS) DNA polymerases. Alternatively, the replisome may skip the damaged DNA, leaving an unreplicated gap to be repaired after replication. This mechanism strictly requires a priming event downstream of the lesion. Here we show that PrimPol, a new human primase and TLS polymerase, uses its primase activity to mediate uninterrupted fork progression after UV irradiation and to reinitiate DNA synthesis after dNTP depletion. As an enzyme involved in tolerance to DNA damage, PrimPol might become a target for cancer therapy.
Journal Article
Base excision DNA repair
2008
DNA repair is a collection of several multienzyme, multistep processes keeping the cellular genome intact against genotoxic insults. One of these processes is base excision repair, which deals with the most ubiquitous lesions in DNA: oxidative base damage, alkylation, deamination, sites of base loss and single-strand breaks, etc. Individual enzymes acting in base excision repair have been identified. The recent years were marked with many advances in understanding of their structure and many interactions that make base excision repair a functional, versatile system. This review describes the current knowledge of structural biology and biochemistry of individual steps of base excision repair, several subpathways of the common base excision repair pathway, and interactions of the repair process with other cellular processes.
Journal Article
Rad54 and Rdh54 prevent Srs2-mediated disruption of Rad51 presynaptic filaments
by
Kwon, Youngho
,
Crickard, J. Brooks
,
Sung, Patrick
in
Biochemistry
,
Biological Sciences
,
Cell Cycle Proteins - metabolism
2022
Srs2 is a superfamily 1 (SF1) helicase that participates in several pathways necessary for the repair of damaged DNA. Srs2 regulates formation of early homologous recombination (HR) intermediates by actively removing the recombinase Rad51 from single-stranded DNA (ssDNA). It is not known whether and how Srs2 itself is down-regulated to allow for timely HR progression. Rad54 and Rdh54 are two closely related superfamily 2 (SF2) motor proteins that promote the formation of Rad51-dependent recombination intermediates. Rad54 and Rdh54 bind tightly to Rad51-ssDNA and act downstream of Srs2, suggesting that they may affect the ability of Srs2 to dismantle Rad51 filaments. Here, we used DNA curtains to determine whether Rad54 and Rdh54 alter the ability of Srs2 to disrupt Rad51 filaments. We show that Rad54 and Rdh54 act synergistically to greatly restrict the antirecombinase activity of Srs2. Our findings suggest that Srs2 may be accorded only a limited time window to act and that Rad54 and Rdh54 fulfill a role of prorecombinogenic licensing factors.
Journal Article
A global profile of replicative polymerase usage
2015
Genome-wide DNA polymerase usage maps determined in fission yeast, using a new sequencing strategy based on ribonucleotide misincorporation, track the division of labor between replicative polymerases and reveal locations and efficiencies of replication origins.
Three eukaryotic DNA polymerases are essential for genome replication. Polymerase (Pol) α–primase initiates each synthesis event and is rapidly replaced by processive DNA polymerases: Polɛ replicates the leading strand, whereas Polδ performs lagging-strand synthesis. However, it is not known whether this division of labor is maintained across the whole genome or how uniform it is within single replicons. Using
Schizosaccharomyces pombe,
we have developed a polymerase usage sequencing (Pu-seq) strategy to map polymerase usage genome wide. Pu-seq provides direct replication-origin location and efficiency data and indirect estimates of replication timing. We confirm that the division of labor is broadly maintained across an entire genome. However, our data suggest a subtle variability in the usage of the two polymerases within individual replicons. We propose that this results from occasional leading-strand initiation by Polδ followed by exchange for Polɛ.
Journal Article
RNase H1 Cooperates with DNA Gyrases to Restrict R-Loops and Maintain Genome Integrity in Arabidopsis Chloroplasts
by
Cheng, Lingling
,
Yang, Zhuo
,
Li, Shuai
in
Arabidopsis
,
Arabidopsis - genetics
,
Chloroplast DNA
2017
Maintaining organellar genome integrity is essential for eukaryotic cells, and many factors can threaten genome integrity. R-loops are DNA:RNA duplexes produced during transcription, with the nontemplated DNA forming a single-stranded region. R-loops function in the regulation of transcription, DNA replication, and DNA repair, but can also be susceptible to lesions that form double-stranded breaks and thus induce genome instability. Frominvestigating the function of a plant chloroplast-localized R-loop removing enzyme AtRNH1C, we have found that it is responsible for plastid R-loop homeostasis, chloroplast genome instability, and development. Interactome analysis revealed that AtRNH1C associates with multiple chloroplast-localized DNA and RNA metabolism-related proteins, including the core DNA gyrases complex. The interaction between AtRNH1C and AtGyrases was critical for R-loop homeostasis in chloroplast and important to release the transcription-replication conflicts in the highly transcribed and replication originated cp-rDNA regions and thus to reduce the DNA damage. Our results reveal the plastid R-loop accumulation leads to chloroplast DNA instability and provide insight into the maintenance of genome integrity in chloroplasts, in which the evolutionarily conserved RNase H1 and DNA gyrase proteins are involved.
Journal Article
DNA methyltransferases and epigenetic regulation in bacteria
by
Adhikari, Satish
,
Curtis, Patrick D.
in
Adenine - chemistry
,
Bacterial Proteins - genetics
,
Bacterial Proteins - metabolism
2016
Epigenetics is a change in gene expression that is heritable without a change in DNA sequence itself. This phenomenon is well studied in eukaryotes, particularly in humans for its role in cellular differentiation, X chromosome inactivation and diseases like cancer. However, comparatively little is known about epigenetic regulation in bacteria. Bacterial epigenetics is mainly present in the form of DNA methylation where DNA methyltransferases add methyl groups to nucleotides. This review focuses on two methyltransferases well characterized for their roles in gene regulation: Dam and CcrM. Dam methyltransferase in Escherichia coli is important for expression of certain genes such as the pap operon, as well as other cellular processes like DNA replication initiation and DNA repair. In Caulobacter crescentus and other Alphaproteobacteria, the methyltransferase CcrM is cell cycle regulated and is involved in the cell-cycle-dependent regulation of several genes. The diversity of regulatory targets as well as regulatory mechanisms suggests that gene regulation by methylation could be a widespread and potent method of regulation in bacteria.
Epigenetic regulation by DNA methylation is a well-characterized process in eukaryotes, but it is becoming evident that this process is also present in prokaryotes and plays important roles in several organisms and multiple processes.
Graphical Abstract Figure.
Epigenetic regulation by DNA methylation is a well-characterized process in eukaryotes, but it is becoming evident that this process is also present in prokaryotes and plays important roles in several organisms and multiple processes.
Journal Article
Management of E. coli sister chromatid cohesion in response to genotoxic stress
by
Planchenault, Charlene
,
Vickridge, Elise
,
Cockram, Charlotte
in
14/19
,
631/326/325/2482
,
631/337/1427/2122
2017
Aberrant DNA replication is a major source of the mutations and chromosomal rearrangements associated with pathological disorders. In bacteria, several different DNA lesions are repaired by homologous recombination, a process that involves sister chromatid pairing. Previous work in
Escherichia coli
has demonstrated that sister chromatid interactions (SCIs) mediated by topological links termed precatenanes, are controlled by topoisomerase IV. In the present work, we demonstrate that during the repair of mitomycin C-induced lesions, topological links are rapidly substituted by an SOS-induced sister chromatid cohesion process involving the RecN protein. The loss of SCIs and viability defects observed in the absence of RecN were compensated by alterations in topoisomerase IV, suggesting that the main role of RecN during DNA repair is to promote contacts between sister chromatids. RecN also modulates whole chromosome organization and RecA dynamics suggesting that SCIs significantly contribute to the repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs).
Homologous recombination of DNA lesions in bacteria involves sister chromatid pairing. Here, the authors show that RecN promotes contacts between sister chromatids and facilitates repair.
Journal Article