Literature DB >> 32132710

Alcohol-derived DNA crosslinks are repaired by two distinct mechanisms.

Michael R Hodskinson1, Alice Bolner2, Koichi Sato2, Ashley N Kamimae-Lanning1, Koos Rooijers2, Merlijn Witte2, Mohan Mahesh1,3, Jan Silhan1,4, Maya Petek1,5, David M Williams6, Jop Kind2, Jason W Chin1, Ketan J Patel7,8, Puck Knipscheer9.   

Abstract

Acetaldehyde is a highly reactive, DNA-damaging metabolite that is produced upon alcohol consumption1. Impaired detoxification of acetaldehyde is common in the Asian population, and is associated with alcohol-related cancers1,2. Cells are protected against acetaldehyde-induced damage by DNA crosslink repair, which when impaired causes Fanconi anaemia (FA), a disease resulting in failure to produce blood cells and a predisposition to cancer3,4. The combined inactivation of acetaldehyde detoxification and the FA pathway induces mutation, accelerates malignancies and causes the rapid attrition of blood stem cells5-7. However, the nature of the DNA damage induced by acetaldehyde and how this is repaired remains a key question. Here we generate acetaldehyde-induced DNA interstrand crosslinks and determine their repair mechanism in Xenopus egg extracts. We find that two replication-coupled pathways repair these lesions. The first is the FA pathway, which operates using excision-analogous to the mechanism used to repair the interstrand crosslinks caused by the chemotherapeutic agent cisplatin. However, the repair of acetaldehyde-induced crosslinks results in increased mutation frequency and an altered mutational spectrum compared with the repair of cisplatin-induced crosslinks. The second repair mechanism requires replication fork convergence, but does not involve DNA incisions-instead the acetaldehyde crosslink itself is broken. The Y-family DNA polymerase REV1 completes repair of the crosslink, culminating in a distinct mutational spectrum. These results define the repair pathways of DNA interstrand crosslinks caused by an endogenous and alcohol-derived metabolite, and identify an excision-independent mechanism.

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32132710      PMCID: PMC7116288          DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2059-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  30 in total

1.  Nucleotide Excision Repair, XPA-1, and the Translesion Synthesis Complex, POLZ-1 and REV-1, Are Critical for Interstrand Cross-Link Repair in Caenorhabditis elegans Germ Cells.

Authors:  Sinae Oh; Woori Bae; Mohammad A Alfhili; Myon Hee Lee
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2020-09-18       Impact factor: 3.162

Review 2.  Recombination and restart at blocked replication forks.

Authors:  Ralph Scully; Rajula Elango; Arvind Panday; Nicholas A Willis
Journal:  Curr Opin Genet Dev       Date:  2021-08-28       Impact factor: 5.578

3.  The structure-specific endonuclease complex SLX4-XPF regulates Tus-Ter-induced homologous recombination.

Authors:  Rajula Elango; Arvind Panday; Francis P Lach; Nicholas A Willis; Kaitlin Nicholson; Erin E Duffey; Agata Smogorzewska; Ralph Scully
Journal:  Nat Struct Mol Biol       Date:  2022-08-08       Impact factor: 18.361

4.  Acetaldehyde makes a distinct mutation signature in single-stranded DNA.

Authors:  Sriram Vijayraghavan; Latarsha Porcher; Piotr A Mieczkowski; Natalie Saini
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2022-07-22       Impact factor: 19.160

5.  The yeast Hrq1 helicase stimulates Pso2 translesion nuclease activity and thereby promotes DNA interstrand crosslink repair.

Authors:  Cody M Rogers; Chun-Ying Lee; Samuel Parkins; Nicholas J Buehler; Sabine Wenzel; Francisco Martínez-Márquez; Yuichiro Takagi; Sua Myong; Matthew L Bochman
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2020-05-05       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 6.  The Ubiquitin Ligase TRAIP: Double-Edged Sword at the Replisome.

Authors:  R Alex Wu; David S Pellman; Johannes C Walter
Journal:  Trends Cell Biol       Date:  2020-12-11       Impact factor: 20.808

7.  Synthesis of DNA Duplexes Containing Site-Specific Interstrand Cross-Links via Sequential Reductive Amination Reactions Involving Diamine Linkers and Abasic Sites on Complementary Oligodeoxynucleotides.

Authors:  Kurt Housh; Kent S Gates
Journal:  Chem Res Toxicol       Date:  2021-10-25       Impact factor: 3.739

8.  Fanconi anemia proteins participate in a break-induced-replication-like pathway to counter replication stress.

Authors:  Xinlin Xu; Yixi Xu; Ruiyuan Guo; Ran Xu; Congcong Fu; Mengtan Xing; Hiroyuki Sasanuma; Qing Li; Minoru Takata; Shunichi Takeda; Rong Guo; Dongyi Xu
Journal:  Nat Struct Mol Biol       Date:  2021-06-10       Impact factor: 15.369

Review 9.  Formation and repair of unavoidable, endogenous interstrand cross-links in cellular DNA.

Authors:  Kurt Housh; Jay S Jha; Tuhin Haldar; Saosan Binth Md Amin; Tanhaul Islam; Amanda Wallace; Anuoluwapo Gomina; Xu Guo; Christopher Nel; Jesse W Wyatt; Kent S Gates
Journal:  DNA Repair (Amst)       Date:  2020-12-24

Review 10.  The role of ALDH2 in tumorigenesis and tumor progression: Targeting ALDH2 as a potential cancer treatment.

Authors:  Hong Zhang; Liwu Fu
Journal:  Acta Pharm Sin B       Date:  2021-02-11       Impact factor: 11.413

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