The DNA and RNA repair protein AlkB removes alkyl groups from nucleic acids by a unique iron- and α-ketoglutarate-dependent oxidation strategy. When alkylated adenines are used as AlkB targets, earlier work suggests that the initial target of oxidation can be the alkyl carbon adjacent to N1. Such may be the case with ethano-adenine (EA), a DNA adduct formed by an important anticancer drug, BCNU, whereby an initial oxidation would occur at the carbon adjacent to N1. In a previous study, several intermediates were observed suggesting a pathway involving adduct restructuring to a form that would not hinder replication, which would match biological data showing that AlkB almost completely reverses EA toxicity in vivo. The present study uses more sensitive spectroscopic methodology to reveal the complete conversion of EA to adenine; the nature of observed additional putative intermediates indicates that AlkB conducts a second oxidation event in order to release the two-carbon unit completely. The second oxidation event occurs at the exocyclic carbon adjacent to the N(6) atom of adenine. The observation of oxidation of a carbon at N(6) in EA prompted us to evaluate N(6)-methyladenine (m6A), an important epigenetic signal for DNA replication and many other cellular processes, as an AlkB substrate in DNA. Here we show that m6A is indeed a substrate for AlkB and that it is converted to adenine via its 6-hydroxymethyl derivative. The observation that AlkB can demethylate m6A in vitro suggests a role for AlkB in regulation of important cellular functions in vivo.
The DNA and RNA repair protein AlkB removes alkyl groups from nucleic acids by a unique iron- and α-ketoglutarate-dependent oxidation strategy. When alkylated adenines are used as AlkB targets, earlier work suggests that the initial target of oxidation can be the alkyl carbon adjacent to N1. Such may be the case with ethano-adenine (EA), a DNA adduct formed by an important anticancer drug, BCNU, whereby an initial oxidation would occur at the carbon adjacent to N1. In a previous study, several intermediates were observed suggesting a pathway involving adduct restructuring to a form that would not hinder replication, which would match biological data showing that AlkB almost completely reverses EA toxicity in vivo. The present study uses more sensitive spectroscopic methodology to reveal the complete conversion of EA to adenine; the nature of observed additional putative intermediates indicates that AlkB conducts a second oxidation event in order to release the two-carbon unit completely. The second oxidation event occurs at the exocyclic carbon adjacent to the N(6) atom of adenine. The observation of oxidation of a carbon at N(6) in EA prompted us to evaluate N(6)-methyladenine (m6A), an important epigenetic signal for DNA replication and many other cellular processes, as an AlkB substrate in DNA. Here we show that m6A is indeed a substrate for AlkB and that it is converted to adenine via its 6-hydroxymethyl derivative. The observation that AlkB can demethylatem6A in vitro suggests a role for AlkB in regulation of important cellular functions in vivo.
Nuclear and mitochondrial DNA is damaged
by radiation, by organic
and inorganic chemical agents and by the misdirected activity of enzymes.
Exogenous and endogenous processes that contribute to genomic damage
include oxidation, alkylation, and deamination of DNA.[1,2] Adducts arising from nucleic acid damage may cause mutations, jeopardize
epigenetic patterns, block DNA and RNA synthesis, inhibit and alter
the coding of mRNA transcription and translation, and promote strand
breaks.[2] Many chemical anticancer agents
have been designed to form toxic DNA adducts. One example, BCNU (1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea),
has been used to treat lymphoma, multiple myeloma, and several types
of brain cancer.[3−5] Among the toxic DNA adducts formed by this chemotherapeutic
agent is 1,N6-ethanoadenine (EA, Figure 1a), which blocks DNA replication.[6−8] In the EA DNA
adduct, the exocyclic N6-nitrogen of adenine
is connected to the N1 ring nitrogen by a saturated two-carbon bridge,
creating a five-membered ring involving the N1 and N6 atoms that otherwise would be involved in canonical
Watson–Crick H-bonding (Figure 1a).
EA is repaired to some extent by the repair protein 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase (AlkA)[9] and the human alkyladenine DNA glycosylase MPG (also called
AAG, ANPG, or APNG).[7] However, for both
of the enzymes, the excision of EA is far less efficient than that
of the structurally related 1,N6-ethenoadenine
(eA), in which the two-carbon bridge is unsaturated (Figure 1d).[9] Because EA lacks
the structural features needed to form a Watson–Crick base
pair with thymine, it is likely to be both toxic and mutagenic. In
the absence of repair, EA blocks polymerase bypass and miscodes during
attempted replication by mammalian DNA polymerases in vitro.[8] The analogous eA adduct, which is also missing
the identical base-pairing capabilities, is both toxic and mutagenic
in in the absence of protection
by the AlkB repair enzyme.[10] Previously,
we reported that AlkB can effectively alleviate the toxicity of the
EA lesion in vivo; in AlkB-proficient cells, EA is easily tolerated
and not significantly mutagenic.[6] However,
EA is extremely toxic to AlkB-deficient cells, showing an 86% reduction
in replication.[6] Preliminary in vitro experiments
done in parallel show that AlkB could only partially convert EA to
generate an open-ring intermediate 2 (Figure 1a, box), trappable with PFBHA. In an attempt to
reconcile the potent ability of the protein to suppress toxicity in
vivo with only partial conversion of the lesion in vitro, we speculated
that intermediate 2, via flexible bond rotation, can
take on a structure to form a regular Watson–Crick base pair
with thymine (Figure 1a, box). That restructured
base pair would not block DNA replication and hence enables tolerance
of the lesion.
Figure 1
Chemical structures of EA, m6A, m1A, and eA and proposed
mechanisms
of AlkB-mediated enzymatic reactions on alkyl-DNA adducts. (a) EA,
(b) m6A, (c) m1A, and (d) eA.
Chemical structures of EA, m6A, m1A, and eA and proposed
mechanisms
of AlkB-mediated enzymatic reactions on alkyl-DNA adducts. (a) EA,
(b) m6A, (c) m1A, and (d) eA.The AlkB protein is an α-ketoglutarate- and
Fe(II)-dependent
dioxygenase that can efficiently repair various alkyl lesions in both
DNA and RNA, in single- and double-stranded contexts.[11,12] It has at least nine human homologues: ABH1 through ABH8 and FTO,
some of which have also been proposed or proven to act upon alkylated
DNA and RNA.[2,13−15] AlkB, together
with Ada, AlkA, and AidB, is one of the four proteins in the adaptive response to alkylating agents.[14] The reported substrate scope for the AlkB enzyme
includes 1-methyladenine (m1A), 3-methylcytosine (m3C), 3-ethylcytosine
(e3C), 1-methylguanine (m1G), 3-methylthymine (m3T), 3,N4-ethenocytosine (eC), eA, and EA.[2,13−15] In the current work, we used high-resolution ESI-TOF
mass spectrometry[16] to investigate the
ability of AlkB to repair EA. To our surprise we found that the oxidizing
enzyme AlkB is capable of complete repair of the EA base (Figure 1a). The observation of AlkB’s complete conversion
of EA to adenine along a defined reaction path makes plausible the
strategy of designing inhibitors to block the repair activity, thus
potentially increasing the anticancer efficacy of BCNU.The
EA dealkylation process requires two oxidation reactions, one
at N1 and a second at N6, to achieve complete
restoration of the undamaged adenine base. The observation of N6oxidation in the reaction of AlkB with EA
suggested that the enzyme might act on other N6-modifications of adenine. One such modification is N6-methyladenine (m6A) (Figure 1b). The m6A base is functionally similar to N- and 5-methylcytosine (m4C and m5C),
and is an important epigenetic signal for DNA replication and repair,
protein–DNA interactions, host-pathogen interactions and other
cellular processes;[17−20] there is approximately one m6A for every 200 bases in the genome.[21] As controls
against which to compare the chemistry of AlkB on m6A (and EA), we
used m1A and eA (Figure 1c and 1d), which are good substrates for AlkB both in vivo and in
vitro.[10,22] As we were preparing this manuscript, Jia
et al. reported that the obesity-associated FTO protein (one of AlkB’s
mammalian homologues) can remove the methyl group from m6A in both
RNA and DNA; they indicated that the demethylation of FTO on m6A in
mRNA correlates with epigenetic regulation in mammalian cells.[23] In our present study, we observe that AlkB can
also demethylatem6A. The implications of this discovery include the
possibility that AlkB might be not only a DNA repair enzyme in but also a participant in cellular epigenetic
control, which may help cells defend against alkylation damage to
nucleic acids.
Results
This study utilized chemical synthesis to incorporate
structurally
defined lesions into specific sites of oligonucleotides. The modified
oligonucleotides were allowed to react with purified AlkB and snapshots
were taken at various time points to identify the products and intermediates
of reactions. This method enabled us to efficiently monitor the ability
of AlkB to repair alkylation damage using a high-resolution mass spectrometry
tool employed by us earlier with a number of DNA lesions.[6,10,16]Four 16mer oligonucleotides
were chemically synthesized containing
the alkyl-DNA adducts shown in Figure 1. The
sequence used was 5′-GAAGACCTXGGCGTCC-3′; the flanking
sequence of each lesion (X) was identical, fixing the local sequence
context for the repair reaction. The 16mers with individual lesions
were incubated with the cofactors for the AlkB reaction: Fe(II) and
α-ketoglutarate (see Experimental Section). In the presence of all cofactors, two sets of experiments were
conducted for each lesion, one with the AlkB protein and one with
the purification buffer of AlkB but without the protein. Following
the repair reaction, HPLC-ESI-TOF mass spectrometry was utilized to
identify the products and intermediates. The 16mer oligonucleotides
demonstrated a good signal in the −4 charge envelope of the
mass spectra. To give one example to illustrate the method of analysis,
the molecular weight (MW) of m1A in the 16mer is calculated as 4902.88
Da for the neutral species, and the MW of its monoisotopic peak (all 12C, 14N, etc.) when ionized with four negative
charges (the −4 charge envelope) in the electric field of the
spectrometer is calculated as having an m/z of 1224.71 (all MWs are shown in Table 1). The multiple peaks in each −4 charge envelope
reflect the number of 13C or other heavier isotopes (Figure 2a). Keeping with m1A as the example, its monoisotopic
peak is observed as 1224.67, consistent with
the theoretical calculation. The next peak in that envelope has an m/z of 1224.92, 0.25 amu larger than the
1224.67 peak, which indicates a species containing 13C, 15N, or another isotope that adds a nominal mass of 1.0 to
the total weight of the 16mer (e.g., 0.25 = m/z = one 13C/charge state of 4). Additional peaks
in the spectrum represent additional heavy isotopes within the parental
16mer.
Table 1
Calculated and Observed Monoisotopic
Molecular Weights of Oligonucleotides and Intermediates Present in
the AlkB Reactions
lesion or
base
MW (calculated)
of neutral species
m/z (calculated) –4 charge monoisotopic peak
m/z (observed) –4 charge monoisotopic peak
A
4888.86
1221.21
1221.13/16/24
m1A
4902.88
1224.71
1224.67
eA
4912.86
1227.21
1227.22
eA epoxide
4928.86
1231.21
1231.22
eA glycol
4946.87
1235.71
1235.72
EA
4914.88
1227.71
1227.67
EA+2
4916.86
1228.21
1228.16
EA+16
4930.87
1231.71
1231.66
EA+32
4946.87
1235.71
1235.67
m6A
4902.88
1224.71
1224.73
HO-m6A
4918.87
1228.71
1228.72
Figure 2
ESI-TOF mass spectra from reactions of alkyl adducts and AlkB protein.
Data represent the −4 charge envelopes and the monoisotopic
peak (all 12C, 14N, etc.) value is labeled above
each peak envelope. (a) m1A, (b) m1A + AlkB, (c) eA, and (d) eA +
AlkB.
ESI-TOF mass spectra from reactions of alkyl adducts and AlkB protein.
Data represent the −4 charge envelopes and the monoisotopic
peak (all 12C, 14N, etc.) value is labeled above
each peak envelope. (a) m1A, (b) m1A + AlkB, (c) eA, and (d) eA +
AlkB.
Model System: AlkB Repairs m1A and eA
Previously, we
investigated m1A and eA lesions as substrates for AlkB both in vitro
and in vivo;[10,16,22] we used those two adducts as controls for the present study on the
structurally similar compounds, m6A and EA.In our in vitro
study of m1A repair, the lesion was completely repaired to the undamaged
base adenine (Figure 2b, m/z = 1221.13), while no change occurred in the absence
of AlkB (Figure 2a, m/z 1224.67). The in vitro results confirm that m1A is a good
substrate for AlkB, and reproduce our prior findings.[16] Moreover, the current observations correlate very well
with the strong reparability of m1A suggested by earlier in vivo lesion
bypass studies.[22] The second control compound
in the present study was eA. eA was observed at m/z of 1227.22 for its −4 charge monoisotopic
peak in the absence of AlkB (Figure 2c). In
the presence of AlkB, the eA lesion was mostly converted to the undamaged
product, adenine (m/z = 1221.24,
Figure 2d). We also observed peak clusters
consistent in MW with epoxide (1231.22) and glycol (1235.72) intermediates
(Figure 1d and Figure 2d), which are consistent with previous observations.[10]
AlkB Repairs EA Completely
In our in vitro experiment
with EA, the oligonucleotide with EA in the absence of AlkB was observed
at m/z of 1227.67 for its −4
charge monoisotopic peak, which agrees well with the calculated m/z 1227.71 (Figure 3a and Table 1). In the presence of AlkB, the
peak envelope of EA disappeared completely after the one hour incubation.
Indeed, EA was converted to four new species in the mass spectrum
(Figure 3b). The peak at m/z of 1221.16 corresponds to the 16mer with an undamaged
adenine base, which we did not find in our previous study.[6] One possible reason could be that the MALDI mass
spectrometry tool we used earlier has poorer resolution than the current
HPLC-ESI-TOF method. Another reason is that MALDI analyzes the samples
immediately after the reactions, giving less time for conversion of
intermediates to adenine. However, the HPLC-ESI-TOF method detects
mass signals after the HPLC separation at room temperature, which
might provide product and intermediate profiles different than those
detected in the MALDI analyses. We also controlled the HPLC autosampler
temperature at 5 °C and found the formation of undamaged adenine
more limited under this condition (Figure 4). Detailed analyses of the product and intermediate kinetics will
be presented in a later section. We also found peaks at m/z of 1231.66 and 1235.67, which match up with intermediates
with one and two extra oxygen atoms added to the EA motif, respectively.
By carefully comparing the high-resolution MWs between the new species
with m/z of 1228.16 and the 16mer
with adenine in the lesion position, we determined that this new species
has two extra atoms, consistent with the addition of one oxygen and
one carbon (intermediate 6 or 9 in Figure 1a).
Figure 3
ESI-TOF mass spectra from reactions of alkyl adducts and
AlkB protein.
Data represent the −4 charge envelopes and the monoisotopic
peak (all 12C, 14N, etc.) value is labeled above
each peak envelope. (a) EA, (b) EA + AlkB, (c) m6A, and (d) m6A +
AlkB.
Figure 4
Percentages (y-axis) of the four species in the
AlkB reactions on EA at 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 40, 60, and 80 min incubation
time points (x-axis) (see data in Table S1, SI ). The combined percentages of the four species
are 100%.
ESI-TOF mass spectra from reactions of alkyl adducts and
AlkB protein.
Data represent the −4 charge envelopes and the monoisotopic
peak (all 12C, 14N, etc.) value is labeled above
each peak envelope. (a) EA, (b) EA + AlkB, (c) m6A, and (d) m6A +
AlkB.In our previously proposed mechanism (Figure 1a, boxed), AlkB can oxidize the carbon atom attached
to the N1 position
of the adenine base. The mono-oxidized intermediates 1 and 2 (Figure 1a) equilibrate
between the ring-closed and ring-opened forms, both bearing an observed m/z of 1231.66. The opened-ring intermediate 2 can take on a conformation in which it can form a Watson–Crick
base pair and thereby not block DNA replication. This hypothesis is
strongly supported by in vivo experiments showing EA is neither toxic
nor mutagenic in AlkB-proficient cells.[6] In the current study, we observed
EA to be completely repaired to the adenine base, which requires oxidation
reactions at both the N1 and N6-attached
carbon atoms (Figures 1a and 3b). A clue as to the reaction path of EA was the observation
of an AlkB-induced glycol (m/z of
1235.67) identical to the glycol formed during removal of the etheno
bridge from eA (Figure 1d). In order for EA
to form a glycol (intermediate 4, Figure 1a) such as that of eA, it would need to experience two oxidation
reactions (Figure 1a). The presence of the
glycol and the observation of other intermediates indicated by their
masses in Figure 1a allowed us to assemble
a reaction network that would explain the removal of the ethano-bridge
from EA. As shown in Figure 1a, AlkB can oxidize
each carbon of the saturated two carbon bridge and completely restore
the undamaged adenine base. The first oxidation can occur either at
the N1- or N6-attached carbon of the EA
moiety and generate intermediate 1 or 3,
respectively. Each ring-closed intermediate will equilibrate with
its ring-opened form 2 or 7. Further oxidation
of 1 or 3 will generate a common intermediate 4, which can also exist in the respective ring-opened form
of 5 or 8. Further oxidation of the ring-opened
intermediate 2 or 7 will also generate 5 or 8. The two-carbon unit attached to EA in
intermediate 5 or 8 can then be released
as glyoxal to form the undamaged adenine (Figure 1a), identical to the final step of eA repair after epoxide
hydrolysis (Figure 1d).[10] If the glycol 4 or the α-hydroxy aldehyde
intermediate 5 or 8 is further oxidized,
two aldehyde products will form: the terminal carbon will be released
as formaldehyde, and the other carbon attached to either the N6- or N1-position of the adenine base will generate
intermediates 6 or 9. The formation of intermediate 6 or 9 should adopt a mechanism similar to typical
oxidative cleavage of a glycol to two aldehydes by sodium periodate.[24,25] It is possible that intermediate 6 or 9 can be spontaneously converted to the adenine base by amide hydrolysis,
or they may remain side products in the reaction rather than formal
intermediates.To elucidate the kinetic distributions of the
four new species
in the AlkB reaction, we carried out a series of enzymatic reactions
at 37 °C with varied time durations at a fixed enzyme–substrate
ratio. We chose the time points at 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 40, 60, and 80
min to quench the reactions and subsequently carried out HPLC-ESI-TOF
analysis using an autosampler set to 5 °C in an effort to keep
the products and intermediates intact. As presented in Figure 4, we observed that the EA starting material was
completely consumed even after the 1 min incubation. This result indicates
that the AlkB reaction on EA happened very fast under the current
reaction conditions. We also observed that a major species in all
mass spectra was the peak at m/z of 1231.66 (from 77.4% to 91.5%, Figure 4 and Table S1, SI), which matches up with
intermediate with one extra oxygen atom added to EA. The percentage
of this mono-oxidation intermediate decreased as incubation at 37
°C went to longer times. The intermediate with two extra oxygen
atoms added to EA displayed a relative low percentage for all time
periods. The ratios of the fully repaired product (undamaged adenine)
and the EA+2 species (intermediate 6 or 9 in Figure 1a) gradually increased as the
incubation time increased (Figure 4). The ratio
of adenine increased from 2.6% to 10.0% during the 1–80 min
interval. By performing the HPLC-ESI-TOF analysis of
the incubation of EA with AlkB using an autosampler at room temperature,
we observed a significantly increased amount of adenine (Figure 3b), which might be generated from the spontaneous
decomposition of the oxidized intermediates.Percentages (y-axis) of the four species in the
AlkB reactions on EA at 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 40, 60, and 80 min incubation
time points (x-axis) (see data in Table S1, SI ). The combined percentages of the four species
are 100%.
AlkB Demethylates m6A
The ability of AlkB to demethylate
an m6A-containing oligonucleotide was addressed. The observed m/z of 1224.73 for the −4 charge
monoisotopic peak from the m6A starting material was seen in the absence
of AlkB (Figure 3c). In the presence of the
AlkB protein, three peak envelopes are seen in the mass spectrum (Figure 3d). The peak at 1224.73 corresponds to the unreacted
16mer containing m6A (about 68% for a 60 min incubation). The 1221.24
peak envelope is assigned to the unmodified base adenine (15%). The
peak envelope at 1228.72 (17%) matches the theoretical MW of the HO-m6A
very well (1228.71 at −4 charge state). It decomposes to A
as the reaction time progresses (Figure S3, SI). We believe this to be the first instance of observing the hydroxymethyl
intermediate in the AlkB reaction for simple methyl adducts, which
strongly supports AlkB’s oxidative demethylation mechanism.
With respect to the 100% conversion of m1A under similar reaction
conditions, the incomplete repair and buildup of hydroxy intermediate
seen for the AlkB reaction with m6A suggest that m6A is more sluggishly
processed than m1A. Unlike the AlkB reaction on m6A, we did not observe
a hydroxy intermediate (i.e., no HO-m1A) in the m1A reaction. The
different behaviors of m1A and m6A could originate from the charge
state of the lesions: at physiological pH, m1A is positively charged,
whereas m6A is neutral. The positively charged HO-m1A intermediate
should be less stable than the neutral HO-m6A, leading to faster accumulation
of adenine and inability to observe the hydroxy intermediate.
Discussion
Biological Implications of AlkB Repair of EA
The alleviation
of EA toxicity by AlkB in provides
an opportunity to investigate further the repair efficiency of such
lesions by human homologues, such as hABH2. If hABH2 or its homologues
can efficiently repair EA in vivo, the anticancer efficacy of BCNU
(and possibly other DNA damaging anticancer drugs) would be greatly
reduced. The design of a chemical inhibitor to block the repair activity
of AlkB or hABH2 on EA should enhance the anticancer efficacy of BCNU.
Knowledge of intermediates along the repair pathway would enable those
studies.
Hypothesis on the Biological Function of m6A Demethylation by
AlkB
Unlike m1A, eA, or EA, the m6A moiety is normally not
considered a lesion. Rather, it is an important postreplicative DNA
modification[17−20] and is considered the “sixth element of DNA” (m5C
being the fifth element in addition to the regular four DNA bases).[19] The results presented here imply that AlkB might
not only act as a repair enzyme to defend against exogenous or endogenous
attacks by alkylating agents but may also help the cell to control
its replication cycle. Besides its direct reversal repair of alkyl
lesions, such as m1A and eA, AlkB, which is strongly induced by DNA
damage, might also demethylatem6A to stop the cell replication cycle
temporarily and provide extra time for the cell to repair alkyl adducts.
After the majority of alkyl lesions are removed, AlkB and other repair
enzymes can be degraded or down-regulated, followed by progression
of the normal cell cycle. The epigenetic control of oxidative demethylation
of m6A and its influence on cellular function regulation is also supported
by the recent discovery of FTO’s demethylation of m6A.[23]
Conclusions
In this study, we demonstrated that AlkB
can demethylatem6A and
completely convert EA to undamaged adenine and other intermediates.
These results indicate that AlkB can act not only as a DNA repair
enzyme but also as a component that may modulate the cellular replication
cycle, thus aiding in surviving
alkylation attacks. Further investigation of the cellular functions
of AlkB will provide insights into AlkB’s defense mechanisms
for the cellular response to environmental attacks as well as the
design and development of inhibitors for AlkB’s human homologues
to improve treatments for cancer therapy.
Experimental Section
Oligonucleotide Synthesis
Oligonucleotides containing
the adducts in Figure 1 were prepared using
the solid-phase phosphoramidite method, and were deprotected, purified,
and identified as described previously.[10,22] For all four
adducts, the oligonucleotide sequence of the 16mers was 5′-GAAGACCTXGGCGTCC-3′,
(X = adduct). The calculated MWs of the oligonucleotides and intermediates
are shown in Table 1. DNA concentration was
measured by UV absorbance using the extinction coefficients (ε)
at 260 nm. For any alkyl-modified base, we substituted its extinction
coefficient with the extinction coefficient of its unmodified counterpart
due to the tiny difference between the values in the context of a
16mer oligonucleotide.
In vitro Incubation Reactions of DNA Adducts with AlkB
All assays were carried out with AlkBΔN11 protein, a truncated
version of AlkB in which the first eleven residues were removed. AlkBΔN11
protein was purified as described and shown previously to have similar
activity to the wild type protein.[6] All
AlkB incubation reactions utilized similar conditions as previously
described.[10,16] Reactions were performed at 37 °C in
45 mM HEPES (pH 8.0), 0.9 mM α-ketoglutarate, 67 μM Fe(NH4)2(SO4)2·6H2O, and 1.8 mM ascorbate, followed by dry ice storage until HPLC-ESI-TOF
MS analysis. A typical reaction was performed with 5 μM DNA,
all cofactors, and with or without 2.5 μM AlkB in a 10-μL
volume for 1 h. In the case of a reaction with no AlkB protein added,
the elution buffer for AlkB purification was added instead. For the
time and volumetric dependency reactions (Figures 4 in text and S1–S4 in SI), the reaction time and volumetric ratio varied correspondingly.
HPLC-ESI-TOF MS analysis
Oligonucleotide analyses were
carried out on an Agilent ESI-TOF mass spectrometer (Palo Alto, CA).
ESI was performed using a needle voltage of 3.5 kV. Nitrogen gas was
set with drying at 10 L/min, the heated capillary at 325 °C and
the nebulizer set at 15 psig. HPLC separations were performed by using
a Zorbax SB-Aq column (2.1 mm × 150 mm; 3.5 μm; Agilent
Technologies, Palo Alto, CA) with a flow rate of 0.2 mL/min. Solvent
A used 10 mM ammonium acetate in water; solvent B used 100% acetonitrile.
A linear gradient was carried out in the following steps: 2 to 30%
B over 30 min, 30 to 2% B over 5 min, and 2 to 2% B over 10 min. LC–MS
analyses were normally carried out at room temperature except for
the data presented in Figure 4, which were
collected with the temperature of the autosampler set at 5 °C.
Data analyses used the Agilent MassHunter Workstation software7.
Authors: Lauren E Frick; James C Delaney; Cintyu Wong; Catherine L Drennan; John M Essigmann Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Date: 2007-01-09 Impact factor: 11.205
Authors: Sarah C Trewick; Timothy F Henshaw; Robert P Hausinger; Tomas Lindahl; Barbara Sedgwick Journal: Nature Date: 2002-09-12 Impact factor: 49.962
Authors: Fangyi Chen; Qi Tang; Ke Bian; Zachary T Humulock; Xuedong Yang; Marco Jost; Catherine L Drennan; John M Essigmann; Deyu Li Journal: Chem Res Toxicol Date: 2016-03-15 Impact factor: 3.739
Authors: Madison B Berger; Alice R Walker; Erik Antonio Vázquez-Montelongo; G Andrés Cisneros Journal: Phys Chem Chem Phys Date: 2021-10-13 Impact factor: 3.945
Authors: Ye Fu; Guifang Jia; Xueqin Pang; Richard N Wang; Xiao Wang; Charles J Li; Scott Smemo; Qing Dai; Kathleen A Bailey; Marcelo A Nobrega; Ke-Li Han; Qiang Cui; Chuan He Journal: Nat Commun Date: 2013 Impact factor: 14.919
Authors: Fangyi Chen; Ke Bian; Qi Tang; Bogdan I Fedeles; Vipender Singh; Zachary T Humulock; John M Essigmann; Deyu Li Journal: Chem Res Toxicol Date: 2017-03-24 Impact factor: 3.973