| Literature DB >> 35269420 |
Alexandros Pailas1, Konstantina Niaka1, Chrysoula Zorzompokou1, Petros Marangos1,2.
Abstract
DNA damage in cells can occur physiologically or may be induced by exogenous factors. Genotoxic damage may cause cancer, ageing, serious developmental diseases and anomalies. If the damage occurs in the germline, it can potentially lead to infertility or chromosomal and genetic aberrations in the developing embryo. Mammalian oocytes, the female germ cells, are produced before birth, remaining arrested at the prophase stage of meiosis over a long period of time. During this extensive state of arrest the oocyte may be exposed to different DNA-damaging insults for months, years or even decades. Therefore, it is of great importance to understand how these cells respond to DNA damage. In this review, we summarize the most recent developments in the understanding of the DNA damage response mechanisms that function in fully grown mammalian oocytes.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage response; DNA repair; checkpoints; oocyte
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35269420 PMCID: PMC8909749 DOI: 10.3390/cells11050798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Characteristic proteins involved in the DNA damage checkpoints. It is worth noting that some proteins belong to more than one category (for example ATM kinase is a sensor and a signal transducer) [3,4].
| Sensors | Mediators | Transducers | Effectors |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Rad9-Rad1-Hus1 (9-1-1 complex) Rad17-RFC2-5 complex Mre11-Rad50-NBS1 (MRN complex) ATM ATR-ATRIP |
BRCA1 53BP1 TopBP1 MDC1 Claspin |
Chk1 Chk2 |
p53 Cdc25 phosphatases CDC7 Cyclin-CDKs complexes |
Figure 1The main repair pathways utilized by the eukaryotic cell.
Figure 2States of arrest and checkpoints during mammalian oocyte maturation. The mammalian oocyte enters prophase arrest in embryonic life. Resumption of meiosis can occur after the onset of puberty. Following ovarian exposure to LH, the oocyte resumes meiosis, undergoes germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) and enters the first meiotic M-phase. After a lengthy prometahase I during which the first meiotic spindle is formed, homologous chromosome pairs align at the spindle equator. The Spindle Assembly Checkpoint (SAC) inhibits chromosome disjunction until all the chromosomes are properly attached to spindle microtubules from opposite spindle poles and under tension from pulling forces directed towards the poles. Chromosome segregation leads to an asymmetric meiotic division and immediate entry into meiosis II, where the oocyte arrests at metaphase II (MII) awaiting fertilization. Severe DNA damage imposed during prophase arrest launches the G2/prophase DNA damage checkpoint (DDC) which inhibits the resumption of meiosis. A damaged oocytes that slips through the DDC may become arrested during the first meiotic M-phase due to the activation of the SAC.
Figure 3The DNA damage checkpoints in mammalian oocytes. DSBs that lead to severe DNA damage in prophase-arrested oocytes (GVs) launch an ATM/Chk1-dependent checkpoint which maintains prophase arrest. The G2/prophase checkpoint is not sensitive enough to detect moderate or low levels of damage. Potentially, prolonged GV culture or coculture with cumulus cells may maintain the state of arrest. Oocytes that enter the first meiotic M-phase in the presence of DNA damage either arrest in M-phase due to actions of the Spindle Assembly Checkpoint (SAC) or complete oocyte maturation and arrest at the second meiotic metaphase (MII) in the presence of DNA damage.
Physiological roles of DDR proteins in oocytes. The names of genes and their proteins are in accordance with Uniprot entries. DDR: DNA damage response, DSB: double-strand break, HR: homologous recombination, NHEJ: nonhomologous end joining, ssDNA: single-stranded DNA, GVBD: germinal vesicle breakdown, MI: meiosis I, MII: meiosis II, SAC: spindle assembly checkpoint, MTOC: microtubule organizing center.
| Organism | Gene | Protein | Role in DDR | Expression during Maturation | Subcellular Localization during Maturation | Role in Oocyte Physiology | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brca1 | Breast cancer type 1 susceptibility protein homolog | Promoting HR and antagonizes 53BP1 [ | Low at GV, increases after GVBD, max at MI and stable afterwards | Germinal Vesicle at GV stage, after GVBD near chromosomes and after prometaphase I at spindle poles. At anaphase I was localized at the midbody and then spindle poles again in MII | Role in spindle assembly, chromosome alignment and SAC regulation | [ | |
| Chek1 | Serine/threonine-protein kinase Chk1 | Involved in cell cycle arrest (intra-S G2/M), repair of damaged DNA [ | Steady expression during maturation from GV to MII stage | Germinal vesicle and after GVBD at the spindle | Essential for the GV arrest of oocytes. Involved in the regulation of SAC | [ | |
| CHEK1 | Checkpoint kinase 1 | Involved in cell cycle arrest (intra-S, G2), repair of damaged DNA [ | Steady expression which reaches max levels at MI | Cytoplasm and after GVBD at the spindle | Involved in the regulation of Cyclin B-CDK1 and SAC in order for MI to be successful | [ | |
| Chek2 | Serine/threonine-protein kinase Chk2 | Involved in cell cycle arrest (G1/S G2/M), repair of damaged DNA, apoptosis [ | - | GV→centromeres→spindle poles | Plays roles in maintaining GV arrest and entry in GVBD and spindle assembly, chromosome alignment and SAC | [ | |
| Rad51 | DNA repair protein RAD51 homolog 1 | Strand invasion during HR [ | Steady expression until MI then decreases | - | Plays pivotal role in mitochondrial, spindle and chromosomal integrity | [ | |
|
| pigRad51 | DNA repair protein RAD51 homolog | Strand invasion during HR [ | Reduction after GVBD and then increase in MII | GV and then cytoplasm | Involved in completion of MI. Roles in mitochondrial integrity. Spindle formation, chromosomal alignment, DNA damage repair | [ |
|
| Tp53bp1 | TP53-binding protein 1 | Promoted NHEJ. Antagonizes with BRCA1 [ | - | Localized like a cloud around DNA/spindle | Important in spindle bipolarity and MTOC and chromosome alignment | [ |
|
| Brca2 | Breast cancer type 2 susceptibility protein homolog | Loading of Rad51 to ssDNA during HR [ | - | Possible cytoplasmic localization in MII oocytes. Following fertilization, BRCA2 shows peri-pronuclear localization | Oocyte maturation, spindle assembly, chromosome alignment | [ |
| Mre11 | Meiotic Recombination 11 | Sensing DSBs, role in repair [ | GV stage, MI | Nuclear localization in GV-stage oocytes | Chromosome integrity | [ | |
| H2AX | Histone H2AX | Phosphorylation of H2AX at Ser-139 (γH2AX) is important for signaling and initiating the repair of DSBs [ | MI, MII | γH2AX localization on the entire chromosome | Unknown | [ |