| Literature DB >> 27491780 |
Anton G Henssen1, Eileen Jiang1, Jiali Zhuang2, Luca Pinello3, Nicholas D Socci4, Richard Koche5, Mithat Gonen6, Camila M Villasante1, Scott A Armstrong5,7, Daniel E Bauer3, Zhiping Weng2, Alex Kentsis8,9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Numerous human genes encode potentially active DNA transposases or recombinases, but our understanding of their functions remains limited due to shortage of methods to profile their activities on endogenous genomic substrates.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27491780 PMCID: PMC4973553 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-016-2877-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Induction of thioguanine resistance and loss of HPRT1 expression in isogenic cells expressing DNA transposase PGBD5. a Stable expression of GFP-PGBD5 and control GFP in BJ-hTERT cells, as assessed by Western blotting against GFP; β-actin serves as loading control. b Clonogenic efficiency of BJ-hTERT cells stably expressing GFP (red) and GFP-PGBD5 (blue) as a function of varying thioguanine concentrations upon thioguanine resistance selection. c Representative photographs of resistant colonies stained with Crystal Violet. d Thioguanine selection of both GFP and GFP-PGBD5 expressing cells yields cells that lack HPRT1 activity, as assessed by hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine (HAT) treatment; *** denotes p = 2.2 × 10−5 and 9.6 × 10−4 for the comparisons between control and thioguanine selected GFP and GFP-PGBD5, respectively. d Thioguanine selection yields thioguanine-resistant cells, as assessed by cellular ATP luminescence assay of GFP (red) and GFP-PGBD5 (blue) expressing cells, as compared to control cells (gray and black). e Western blot for HPRT1 in BJ-hTERT cells expressing GFP and GFP-PGBD5 upon thioguanine selection; β-actin serves as loading control. All error bars represent standard deviations of 3 biological replicates
Fig. 2Massively parallel DNA sequencing combined with PCR amplification for high-resolution mutational analysis of HPRT1. a Schematic of the human HPRT1 gene structure with vertical bars and horizontal arrows denoting exons and amplicons as numbered. b Photograph of ethidium bromide-stained and electrophoretically-resolved HPRT1 PCR amplicons of genomic DNA isolated from GFP (red) and GFP-PGBD5 (blue) expressing cells before (−) and after (+) thioguanine resistance selection
Fig. 3Comprehensive genomic analysis of HPRT1 mutations reveals PGBD5-mediated induction of complex genomic rearrangements. a (left) Distribution of the mutational frequency (y-axis) and the location (x-axis) of single nucleotide variants (SNV) and small indels in HPRT1 of cells before (blue) and after (orange) thioguanine resistance selection. Exons are denoted by gray bars. (right) Comparative analysis of the frequencies of SNVs and indels in HPRT1 before (−) and after (+) thioguanine resistance selection reveals no significant differences between GFP and GFP-PGBD5 expressing cells; * and ** denote p < 0.05 and p < 0.01 for exonic and intronic variants, respectively (Exonic GFP p = 8.32e-6, exonic GFP-PGBD5 p = 0.09, intronic GFP p = 2.77e-36, intronic GFP-PGBD5 p = 4.77e-06). b Combined comparative analysis of the frequencies of SNVs and indels in HPRT1 in GFP and GFP-PGBD5 expressing cells (p = 7.90e-4). c Distribution of the locations of the 5′ ends of complex structural variants in cells before (−) and after (+) thioguanine resistance selection, as detected by laSV and marked by arrows denoting deletions (brown), inversions (blue), duplications (purple), and translocations (red). Black arrows mark annotated DNA transposons. d Expression of GFP-PGBD5 leads to induction of complex structural variants before (−) and after (+) thioguanine resistance selection (Total number of SVs GFP vs. PGBD5, p = 0.001, Poisson test, 95 % confidence interval 0.262–0.713)
laSV detects significantly more inactivating mutations in thioguanine-resistant cells
| Control | Thioguanine | |
|---|---|---|
| GFP | 0/10 | 7/17 |
| GFP-PGBD5 | 12/36 | 10/29 |
Values denote the number of inactivating / total variants detected
Fig. 4PGBD5-associated HPRT1 structural variants contain terminal signal sequences. a Analysis of the sequences flanking structural variant breakpoints demonstrating association of specific signal sequence motifs in cells expressing GFP-PGBD5 (top), but not GFP control (bottom). X-axis denotes nucleotide sequence logo position, and y-axis denotes information content in bits. Black arrowheads mark the location of the breakpoints. b Breakpoint sequences of a representative structural variant (deletion bnd_11) showing PSS sequence at both breakpoints of a deletion
A putative PGBD5 signal sequence (PSS) can be found at breakpoints of structural variants in PGBD5 expressing cells
Sequences are listed in 5′ to 3′ direction with the breakpoint being on the 3′ end