| Literature DB >> 21209706 |
Rajesh P Rastogi1, Ashok Kumar, Madhu B Tyagi, Rajeshwar P Sinha.
Abstract
DNA is one of the prime molecules, and its stability is of utmost importance for proper functioning and existence of all living systems. Genotoxic chemicals and radiations exert adverse effects on genome stability. Ultraviolet radiation (UVR) (mainly UV-B: 280-315 nm) is one of the powerful agents that can alter the normal state of life by inducing a variety of mutagenic and cytotoxic DNA lesions such as cyclobutane-pyrimidine dimers (CPDs), 6-4 photoproducts (6-4PPs), and their Dewar valence isomers as well as DNA strand breaks by interfering the genome integrity. To counteract these lesions, organisms have developed a number of highly conserved repair mechanisms such as photoreactivation, base excision repair (BER), nucleotide excision repair (NER), and mismatch repair (MMR). Additionally, double-strand break repair (by homologous recombination and nonhomologous end joining), SOS response, cell-cycle checkpoints, and programmed cell death (apoptosis) are also operative in various organisms with the expense of specific gene products. This review deals with UV-induced alterations in DNA and its maintenance by various repair mechanisms.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21209706 PMCID: PMC3010660 DOI: 10.4061/2010/592980
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nucleic Acids ISSN: 2090-0201
Figure 1DNA damage and maintenance. Genomic lesions produced by various DNA damaging agents trigger several specific repair machinery to conserve the genomic integrity. In case of severe damage and/or failure of repair mechanisms, cells undergo apoptosis or induce a complex series of phenotypic changes, that is, SOS response. Sometimes the potentiality of lesions in the genome is mitigated by a phenomenon known as damage tolerance, during which DNA lesions are recognized by certain repair machinery, allowing the cells to undergo normal replication and gene expression. The cellular response to DNA damage may activate cell-cycle checkpoint by means of a network of signaling pathway that gives the cell extra time to repair the genomic lesions or may induce cell suicide response/programmed cell death (PCD).
Figure 2Structures of DNA duplexes showing the presence of lesions (in green) such as CPD (a), 6-4PP (b), and 6-4 Dewar dimer (c). Hydrogen atoms are not shown, prepared from PDB entries 1TTD [24], 1CFL [25], and 1QKG [26] using PyMol. (version 1.1r1) [27].
Figure 3Pathway of UVR-induced T-T (a) and T-C (b) CPD, 6-4PPs, and their Dewar isomers.
Figure 4Possible diastereoisomers of pyrimidine T <> T dimer.
Figure 5Formation of cytosine photohydrate (6-hydroxy-5,6-dihydrocytosine) as a result of photohydration reaction.
Figure 6Structure of purinic photoproduct, that is, adenine dimer, porschke photoproduct and thymine-adenine photoadduct.
Figure 7Cis-syn CPD showing the right-handed or left-handed twist in DNA duplex. Dotted arrows elucidate the strongest nuclear overhauser enhancement (NOE) interaction in both cases (Adopted from Lukin and de los Santos [75]).
Figure 8Schematic representation showing different pathways of DSBs.
Various strategies for the detection of damaged DNA.
| DNA damage detection strategies | Types of lesions detected | References |
|---|---|---|
| PCR based assay (TDPCR, LMPCR, ICPCR, SINE) | Decrease in DNA template activity, T <> T CPDs, 6-4PPs | [ |
| Commet assay (Single-cell gel Electrophoresis) | Oxidative DNA damage and single/double strand break | [ |
| Halo assay/AHA/FHA | Chromatin fragility/single strand breaks at the single cell level | [ |
| TUNEL assay | Single/double strand breaks, apoptosis | [ |
| HPLC-MS/MS | Oxidative DNA damage; CPDs, 6-4PPs and their related Dewar valence isomers; 5-hydroxy-2-deoxyuridine,8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2-Deoxyadenosine; 5-Methylcytosine and adenine | [ |
| FISH | Chromosomes with numerical aberrations | [ |
| FCM | Chromosomal aberrations, sister chromatid exchange, chemical adducts to DNA and DNA strand breakage | [ |
| Annexin V labeling | Chromatin condensation, DNA fragmentation, radiation-induced apoptosis | [ |
| Immuno-dot-blot assay | CPDs, 6-4PPs and their Dewar valence isomers | [ |
| RIA | CPDs and 6-4PPs | [ |
| GC-MS | Strand break, modified bases, abasic sites, DNA-protein crosslinks and other oxidative DNA damage. | [ |
| FADU | Single/double strand breaks and alkali-labile sites | [ |
| NMR spectroscopy | Lesions induced distortions of DNA duplex | [ |
PCR: polymerase chain reaction; TDPCR: terminal transferasedependent PCR; LMPCR: ligation-mediated PCR; ICPCR: immuno-coupled PCR; SINE: short interspersed DNA element; AHA: alkaline-halo assay; FHA: fast halo assay; TUNEL: terminal deoxyribonucleotidyl transferase mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick end labeling; HPLC-MS/MS: high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry; FISH: fluorescence in situ hybridization; FCM: flow cytometry; RIA: radio immunoassay; ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; GC-MS: gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; NMR: nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
Photolyase enzymes in four different kingdoms.
| Kingdom | Organism | CPD Photolyase | 6-4PP Photolyase | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| + | − | [ | ||
| Archaebacteria | + | − | [ | |
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| Eubacteria | + | − | [ | |
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | + | [ | ||
| ? | ? | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| Eukaryotes | + | − | [ | |
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | + | [ | ||
| + | + | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
| + | − | [ | ||
Figure 9Photoreactivation: incidence of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) results in pyrimidine lesion (thymine dimer), which is recognized by a photoreactivating enzyme “photolyase”. The light energy (>380 nm) is trapped by the antenna molecules of photolyase (such as MTHF/8-HDF/FMN) and transfers them to catalytic cofactor FADH− which becomes excited and transfers energy to the pyrimidine dimer in the form of e−, splitting the CPD into two monomeric unit, and then electron is transferred back to the flavin molecule.
DNA glycosylases and their probable substrate in bacteria, yeast, and human (modified from Sinha and Häder [22]).
| Glycosylases | Organisms | Genes | Substrate |
|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Uracil DNA glycosylase | uracil from ss- and ds-DNA | ||
| U from U : G, ethenocytosine, hypoxanthine and 5-hydroxycytosine | |||
| ? | |||
| Uracil | |||
| Human | uracil from ss- and ds-DNA | ||
| uracil from ss-DNA, hydroxymethyluracil, formyluracil | |||
| (2) 3-methyl adenine DNA glycosylase | 3-methyladenine | ||
| 3-methyladenine, 7-methylguanine, 2-methylcytosine, 5-formyluracil | |||
| 3-methyladenine, 7-methylguanine | |||
| Human | 3-methyladenine hypoxanthine | ||
| (3) UV-endonuclease | T4 | ||
| ? | ? | ||
| Pyrimidine dimers | |||
| ? | ? | ||
| Pyrimidine dimers | |||
| Human | ? | ||
| (4) Endonuclease III/thymine glycol DNA glycosylase | 5-hydroxycytosine, thymine glycol, urea | ||
| oxidative DNA damage, thymine glycol and formamido-pyrimidines, oxidized pyrimidines, 2 formamido-pyrimidine-G, Me7- formamido-pyrimidine-G | |||
| oxidative DNA damage, Thymine glycol and formamido-pyrimidines residues, 5-hydroxycytosine, oxidized pyrimidines, Me7-fapy-G | |||
| Human | oxidized guanine lesions | ||
| (5) Endonuclease VIII | Thymine, thymine glycol, urea, 5-hydroxycytosine, dihydrothymine, and b-ureidoisobutyric acid | ||
| ? | ? | ||
| Human | 5-hydroxyuracil, 5-hydroxycytosine, 5,6-dihydrouracil, thymine glycol, formamido-pyrimidines (FapyA/G) | ||
| 5-hydroxyuracil and 5-hydroxycytosine | |||
| ? | |||
| (6) fapy/8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase | 2,6-diamino-5-formamidopyrimidine 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine, 5-hydroxycytosine | ||
| 2,6-diamino-5-formamidopyrimidine 8-oxoG, 2 formamidopyrimidine-G, Me7-formamidopyrimidine-G | |||
| Human | 8-hydroxyguanine, Me7-formamidopyrimidine-G | ||
| (7) A-G-mismatch DNA glycolsylase | Adenine/C | ||
| 2-aminopurine/G and A/2-aminopurine, Adenine/C | |||
| Human | Adenine from G : A, 8-oxoG : A, 2-hydroxyadenine | ||
| (8) G-T-mismatch DNA glycosylase | ? | ? | |
| Thymine residues from T-G mismatches | |||
| Uracil from G : U | |||
| Human | Thymine from T : G | ||
| Recognizes a G : T mispair in a CpG sequence | |||
| (9) Formyluracil DNA glycosylase | Formyluracil mispaired with A & G | ||
| ? | |||
| Formyluracil mispaired with G | |||
| ? | ? | ||
| Human | Formyluracil mispaired with G | ||
| hNTH1 | ? | ||
| (10) Hydroxymethyl uracil DNA glycosylase | ? | ? | |
| ? | ? | ||
| Human | ? | 5-hydroxymethyluracil mispaired with G | |
Figure 10Schematic overview of mammalian SP-BER (a), and LP-BER (b). SP-BER is initiated by the activity of glycosylase and APE1, followed by scaffold protein XRCC1 and pol. β to remove the damaged nucleotide and DNA ligase III seals the nick. In case of LP-BER, after DNA damage by ionizing radiation, PNK is recruited to convert the damaged ends to 3′OH and 5′P moieties. Here PARP1/2, followed by XRCC1, is involved. PCNA and DNA pol. β and/or pol. −δ/ε extend and fill the gap by >2 nucleotides. Replication factor-C (RFC) is required to load the PCNA on DNA. Ultimately the resulting 5′flap of DNA is removed by the flap endonuclease I (FEN1) and subsequently the nick is sealed by DNA ligase I.
Figure 11Molecular mechanisms of global genome nucleotide excision repair (GG-NER) and transcriptional coupled nucleotide excision repair (TC-NER) in mammals. For details see the text.
Figure 12Different pathway for recognition of DNA lesions such as CPD and 6-4PP. In case of CPD photoproduct (cause little distortion), XPC complex binds to the lesion after recruitment of UV-DDB whereas 6-4PP that distorts the DNA helix to a great extent can be recognized either by interacting with prebound UV-DDB or directly by XPC complex.
NER proteins and their probable role in human and S. cerevisiae.
| NER Factors | Name | Function | References | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | Yeast | Size (a.a) | ||||||
| XPC-hHR23B | XPC | Rad4 | 940 | Binds damaged DNA; recruits other NER proteins; works with hHR23B. involved only in GGR | [ | |||
| hHR23B | Rad23 | 409 | Stimulates XPC activity in vitro; contains ubiquitin domain | [ | ||||
| hHR23A | Rad23 | 363 | Can substitute for hHR23B | [ | ||||
| CEN2 | — | 172 | Stabilizes the XPC-hHR23B complex | [ | ||||
| TFIIH | XPB | Rad25/SSL2 | 782 | 3′ → 5′ helicase | [ | |||
| XPD | Rad3 | 760 | 5′ → 3′ helicase | [ | ||||
| p34 | TFB4 | 303 | DNA binding? | [ | ||||
| p44 | SSL1 | 395 | DNA binding? | [ | ||||
| p62 | TFB1 | 548 | Core TFIIH subunit | [ | ||||
| p52 | TFB2 | 462 | Core TFIIH subunit | [ | ||||
| Mat1 | TFB3 | 309 | CDK assembly factor; CAK subcomplex | [ | ||||
| Cdk7 | Kin28 | 346 | CDK, C-terminal domain kinase; (CAK) subcomplex; phosphorylates RNA pol. II and other substrates | [ | ||||
| Cyclin H | CCL1 | 323 | Cyclin; CAK subcomplex | [ | ||||
| TFB5/TTDA (p8) | Tfb5 | 71 | Stabilizing subunit | [ | ||||
| XPA | XPA | Rad14 | 273 | Binds damaged DNA and facilitates repair complex assembly; affinity for ssDNA | [ | |||
| RPA70 | Rfa1 | 616 | Stabilizes opened DNA complex; positions nucleases; ssDNA binding | [ | ||||
| RPA | RPA32 | Rfa2 | 270 | Stabilizes opened DNA complex; positions nucleases; ssDNA binding | [ | |||
| RPA14 | Rfa3 | 121 | Stabilizes open complex (with XPA/Rad14) | [ | ||||
| XPG | XPG | Rad2 | 1186 | Endonuclease (catalyzes 3′ incision); stabilizes full open complex | [ | |||
| ERCC1-XPF | ERCC1 | Rad10 | 297 | Part of structure-specific endonuclease; catalyzes 5′ incision; interstrand cross-link repair | [ | |||
| XPF | Rad1 | 905 | Part of endonuclease (5′-incision); recombination via single-strand annealing | [ | ||||
| DDB | DDB1 | — | 1140 | CPD recognition? | [ | |||
| DDB2 | — | 428 | Chromatin remodeling? | [ | ||||
Figure 13Schematic representation of recombinational repair by (a) non-homologous end joining (NHEJ), and (b) homologous recombination (HR).
Figure 14SOS response: As a result of massive DNA damage and failure of all possible repair mechanisms, RecA proteins is expressed, which activate the auto breakdown of LexA proteins, allowing the induction of all SOS responding genes. The pathway of SOS response is reversed when damages are repaired through the damage specific mechanisms. Here the inactivation of RecA protein allows the accumulation of LexA, which bind to SOS promoters and repress all SOS responding genes. SOS response is highly mutagenic due to involvement of DNA polymerase V/IV.
Figure 15Schematic illustration of DNA damage-induced cell-cycle checkpoint activation (for details, see text).