| Literature DB >> 23203191 |
Matthias Bosshard1, Enni Markkanen, Barbara van Loon.
Abstract
Relatively low levels of antioxidant enzymes and high <span class="Chemical">oxygen metabolism result in formation of numerous oxidized DNA lesions in the tissues of the central nervous system. Accumulation of damage in the DNA, due to continuous genotoxic stress, has been linked to both aging and the development of various neurodegenerative disorders. Different DNA repair pathways have evolved to successfully act on damaged DNA and prevent genomic instability. The predominant and essential DNA repair pathway for the removal of small DNA base lesions is base excision repair (BER). In this review we will discuss the current knowledge on the involvement of BER proteins in the maintenance of genetic stability in different brain regions and how changes in the levels of these proteins contribute to aging and the onset of neurodegenerative disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23203191 PMCID: PMC3546685 DOI: 10.3390/ijms131216172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Short-patch (SP-) and long-patch base excision repair (LP-BER) sub-pathways. The damaged base is recognized and excised by a DNA glycosylase, resulting often in AP site formation, which is further processed by APE1. Subsequent end-processing generates 3′-OH and 5′-phosphate (5′-P) termini, enabling access of repair Pols. Depending on the number of newly incorporated nucleotides, the BER pathway divides into two sub-pathways: short-patch BER (SP-BER) and long-patch BER (LP-BER). (A) In SP-BER, a Pol β-mediated single nucleotide incorporation is followed by strand ligation, catalyzed by the XRCC1/DNA ligase III complex; (B) In contrast, LP-BER synthesizes a repair patch consisting of 2–12 nucleotides by: (i) the Hit-and-Run mechanism involving alternating FEN1 cleavage and Pols β synthesis; or (ii) the strand-displacement DNA synthesis concerted by Pols β and δ/ɛ. The 5′-flap, created during strand-displacement DNA synthesis, is removed by the FEN1 generating a nick. The FEN1 created nick is sealed by DNA ligase I. For more details see text.
Overview of BER proteins and their involvement in physiology and pathology of the brain. The information listed is an overview of the data presented in the manuscript text. ↑ stands for up-regulation or an increase, while ↓ signifies either down-regulation or decrease.
| Protein | Physiological expression in brain | Expression changes induced by | Changes associated with neurodgenerative disorders | Brain specific effect of knockout/knockdown | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protein family | ||||||||
| Helix-hairpin-helix family | - ↓ postnatal | ↑ | - cigarette smoke | PD | - ↑ | - differentiation shiftneural to astrocytic lineage | ||
| ALS | - S326C increased risk | |||||||
| ↓ | - dieldrin-differentiated cells | HD | - OGG1 increases TNR instability, especially the S326C | |||||
| No change | - lead (Pb) | Stroke/Ischemia | - various effects depending on the model used | |||||
| AD | - ↑ but also ↓ observed | |||||||
| - ↑ in neonate and adult brain | None reported | PD | - ↑ | None reported | ||||
| Stroke/Ischemia | - mainly ↑ | |||||||
| Other disorders | - possibly ↓ in equine cerebellar abiotrophy | |||||||
| None reported | None reported | Diverse disorders | - ↑ in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder patients | None reported | ||||
| None reported | None reported | Diverse disorders | - no association with MS risk | None reported | ||||
| Endonuclease VIII-like | - ↑ mid-age, during differentiation | None reported | Stroke/Ischemia | - no changes by OGD in hippocampal slice cultures, ↓ by hypothermia | - impaired memory and increased brain damage after ischemia/reperfusion in ko mice | |||
| - ↑ during differentiation | None reported | Stroke/Ischemia | - no changes after OGD | None reported | ||||
| - stem cell rich regions, also in early embryos | None reported | Stroke/Ischemia | - ↓ in hypoxia | - ko with ↓ neuronal progenitors and NSC differentiation ability | ||||
| - highly expressed in several brain regions | None reported | None reported | - ko results in suppression, while Tg in increase of toxicity induced by alkylating agents | |||||
| UDG | - varying expression depending on brain region and age | None reported | AD/TNR disorders | - changed in tauopathies and ↓ in AD patients | - ko and Tg with neurodegeneration | |||
| None reported | None reported | None reported | - ko embryonic lethal | |||||
| - ↓ with age | ↑ | - 100% O2 in brains of young rats, but not in old ones | AD | - ↑ levels in patients, varying expression upon Aβ treatment | None reported | |||
| PD | - ↑ levels of p-APE1 (less active) | |||||||
| HD | - 2-fold increase in cerebellum HD mice | |||||||
| Stroke/ischemia | - ↓ in several models of hypoxia, hypothermia, stroke and trauma | |||||||
| Other diseases | - ↓ in AOA patients | |||||||
| None reported | None reported | HD | - implicated in TNR expansion, increased in cerebellum of HD mice | None reported | ||||
| - low expression | None reported | MCSZ | - multiple mutations associated | None reported | ||||
| - constitutive expression | None reported | AD | - Aβ induced Pol β-mediated cell cycle reentrance, neuronal loss and differentiation of neural progenitors to neuronal lineage | - neonatal lethal, altered neurogenesis in ko mice, which is p53 dependent and more pronounced in a DNA-PKcs ko background | ||||
| HD | - Pol β accumulation along CAG repeats in striatum of HD mice | |||||||
| Stroke/ischemia | - ↑ in several models | |||||||
| None reported | None reported | HD | - Pol δ blocks TNR expansion together with Srs2 and resolves srs1 and resolves TNR-based hairpin structures together with WRN | None reported | ||||
| None reported | None reported | AD | - R194W and R399 ↑ risk, no effect by R280H/R399Q | - XRCC1nes−cre ko mice age-dependent accumulation of DNA damage, loss of certain neurons in the cerebellum and altered hippocampal homeostasis | ||||
| HD | - 2-fold increase in cerebellum HD mice | |||||||
| Stroke/ischemia | - ↓ in several models of ischemia, hypothermia | |||||||
| Other diseases | - ↑ levels in some parts of the brains of Down’s syndrome patients, and ↓ in others | |||||||
| - moderate in cerebellum, lateral ventricle and cerebral cortex | HD | - 2-fold ↑ in cerebellum HD mice | - essential for embryonic development | |||||
| - ↑ in cerebellum and cerebral cortex | SCAN | - association due to interaction with TDP1? | - essential for embryonic development | |||||
| AOA1 | - association? | |||||||