Literature DB >> 10207101

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae homologues of endonuclease III from Escherichia coli, Ntg1 and Ntg2, are both required for efficient repair of spontaneous and induced oxidative DNA damage in yeast.

I Alseth1, L Eide, M Pirovano, T Rognes, E Seeberg, M Bjørås.   

Abstract

Endonuclease III from Escherichia coli is the prototype of a ubiquitous DNA repair enzyme essential for the removal of oxidized pyrimidine base damage. The yeast genome project has revealed the presence of two genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, NTG1 and NTG2, encoding proteins with similarity to endonuclease III. Both contain the highly conserved helix-hairpin-helix motif, whereas only one (Ntg2) harbors the characteristic iron-sulfur cluster of the endonuclease III family. We have characterized these gene functions by mutant and enzyme analysis as well as by gene expression and intracellular localization studies. Targeted gene disruption of NTG1 and NTG2 produced mutants with greatly increased spontaneous and hydrogen peroxide-induced mutation frequency relative to the wild type, and the mutation response was further increased in the double mutant. Both enzymes were found to remove thymine glycol and 2, 6-diamino-4-hydroxy-5-N-methylformamidopyrimidine (faPy) residues from DNA with high efficiency. However, on UV-irradiated DNA, saturating concentrations of Ntg2 removed only half of the cytosine photoproducts released by Ntg1. Conversely, 5-hydroxycytosine was removed efficiently only by Ntg2. The enzymes appear to have different reaction modes, as judged from much higher affinity of Ntg2 for damaged DNA and more efficient borhydride trapping of Ntg1 to abasic sites in DNA despite limited DNA binding. Northern blot and promoter fusion analysis showed that NTG1 is inducible by cell exposure to DNA-damaging agents, whereas NTG2 is constitutively expressed. Ntg2 appears to be a nuclear enzyme, whereas Ntg1 was sorted both to the nucleus and to the mitochondria. We conclude that functions of both NTG1 and NTG2 are important for removal of oxidative DNA damage in yeast.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10207101      PMCID: PMC84209          DOI: 10.1128/MCB.19.5.3779

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cell Biol        ISSN: 0270-7306            Impact factor:   4.272


  40 in total

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5.  Repair of oxidatively damaged guanine in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by an alternative pathway.

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6.  An interaction between the mammalian DNA repair protein XRCC1 and DNA ligase III.

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7.  Isolation and characterization of endonuclease VIII from Escherichia coli.

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8.  Atomic structure of the DNA repair [4Fe-4S] enzyme endonuclease III.

Authors:  C F Kuo; D E McRee; C L Fisher; S F O'Handley; R P Cunningham; J A Tainer
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9.  2.2 Mb of contiguous nucleotide sequence from chromosome III of C. elegans.

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  48 in total

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Review 3.  Cytosolic iron-sulfur cluster assembly (CIA) system: factors, mechanism, and relevance to cellular iron regulation.

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8.  Mitochondrial dysfunction leads to nuclear genome instability via an iron-sulfur cluster defect.

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9.  Biological consequences of oxidative stress-induced DNA damage in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

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10.  Efficient removal of formamidopyrimidines by 8-oxoguanine glycosylases.

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