| Literature DB >> 20309721 |
Montaser Shaheen1, Elizabeth Williamson, Jac Nickoloff, Suk-Hee Lee, Robert Hromas.
Abstract
Metnase is a fusion gene comprising a SET histone methyl transferase domain and a transposase domain derived from the Mariner transposase. This fusion gene appeared first in anthropoid primates. Because of its biochemical activities, both histone (protein) methylase and endonuclease, we termed the protein Metnase (also called SETMAR). Metnase methylates histone H3 lysine 36 (H3K36), improves the integration of foreign DNA, and enhances DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair by the non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) pathway, potentially dependent on its interaction with DNA Ligase IV. Metnase interacts with PCNA and enhances replication fork restart after stalling. Metnase also interacts with and stimulates TopoIIalpha-dependent chromosome decatenation and regulates cellular sensitivity to topoisomerase inhibitors used as cancer chemotherapeutics. Metnase has DNA nicking and endonuclease activity that linearizes but does not degrade supercoiled plasmids. Metnase has many but not all of the properties of a transposase, including Terminal Inverted Repeat (TIR) sequence-specific DNA binding, DNA looping, paired end complex formation, and cleavage of the 5' end of a TIR, but it cannot efficiently complete transposition reactions. Interestingly, Metnase suppresses chromosomal translocations. It has been hypothesized that transposase activity would be deleterious in primates because unregulated DNA movement would predispose to malignancy. Metnase may have been selected for in primates because of its DNA repair and translocation suppression activities. Thus, its transposase activities may have been subverted to prevent deleterious DNA movement.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20309721 PMCID: PMC2847698 DOI: 10.1007/s10709-010-9452-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genetica ISSN: 0016-6707 Impact factor: 1.082
Documented Metnase functions
| Function/property | Assay(s) | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Promotes NHEJ | Plasmid transfection/rescue | Requires SET and nuclease domains | Lee et al. ( |
| Histone H3K36 methylase | In vitro | May promote recruitment of NHEJ components | Lee et al. ( |
| Promotes DNA integration | Plasmid and viral DNA transfection | No sequence specificity for integrating DNA; target specificity unknown | Lee et al. ( |
| Enhances IR resistance | Colony formation | Probably NHEJ dependent | Lee et al. ( |
| LigIV interaction | Co-IP | Probably underlies NHEJ role | Hromas et al. ( |
| Suppresses large NHEJ deletions | Plasmid transfection/rescue | May promote limited 5′ overhang end-processing | Hromas et al. ( |
| Promotes lentivirus integration | Lentivirus infection | Protects viral DNA ends; enhances specific targeting (regional, not sequence specific) | Williamson et al. ( |
| Interacts with hPso4 | Co-IP | Interaction required for Metnase recruitment to DSBs | Beck et al. ( |
| Interacts with NBS1 | Co-IP/colocalization in IR-induced foci | Depends on hPso4 interaction | Beck et al. ( |
| Interacts with TopoIIα | co-IP, co-localization | Co-localization maximum in M phase (decatenation) | Williamson et al. ( |
| Promotes TopoIIα-dependent decatenation | kDNA decatentation; decatenation checkpoint | Role in M phase; possible role in S phase; blocked by SAM | Williamson et al. ( |
| Cleaves supercoiled and 5′ fork DNAs | In vitro cleavage | Requires transposase domain DDN motif | Roman et al. ( |
| Binds/nicks | Gel mobility shift, in vitro cleavage | Weak Hsmar1 cleavage | Miskey et al. ( |
| Binds/nicks | In vitro cleavage and transposition | No transposition activity; may promote DNA integration into | Liu et al. ( |
| Binds | In vitro gel shift | Independent of hPso4 | Beck et al. ( |
| Binds non-TIR DNA | In vitro gel shift | Requires hPso4 | Beck et al. ( |
| Enhances resistance to topoisomerase inhibitors | Cell survival | May regulate tumor resistance to certain chemotherapeutics | Wray et al. ( |
| Automethylated | Mass spectrometry | Regulates TopoIIα decatenation activity in vitro | Williamson et al. ( |
| Enhances stalled replication fork restart | DNA fiber analysis | Normal fork progression not altered | DeHaro et al. ( |
Fig. 1Metnase gene structure: Exons 1 and 2 encode the pre-SET, SET and the post-SET domains. Exon 3 encodes the transposase domain, which includes an HTF motif that mediates TIR binding. The catalytic activity of transposases lies in the DDD/E-like motif, which in Metnase is DDN, which may account for the lack of certain transposase activities. Metnase is phosphorylated at S495 by Chk1 after DNA damage (unpublished data)
Fig. 2Potential Metnase binding sites in the human genome. There are about 200 copies of the defective Mariner ancestor Hsmar1, about 2,500 copies of MITES, which are similar to Tc1/Mariner transposons but lack central elements. There are also about 4,500 solo TIR sequences
Fig. 3Role of Metnase in NHEJ. Metnase binds DNA DSBs in the presence of Pso4, and then interacts with DNA Ligase IV, which catalyzes the final ligation step. This figure does not include the potential ways by which Metnase could enhance NHEJ repair by modifying chromatin structure through its H3K36 histone methylase activity. As noted in the text, SET domain mutations interfere with the ability of Metnase to enhance NHEJ, implying that histone methylation is indeed important for its activity in NHEJ repair. The crystal structure of Metnase has been deposited in the structure database (3B05, 3F2k) although not published, and it appears that Metnase exists as a dimer