Literature DB >> 35524550

Human activation-induced deaminase lacks strong replicative strand bias or preference for cytosines in hairpin loops.

Ramin Sakhtemani1,2,3, Madusha L W Perera1, Daniel Hübschmann4,5,6, Reiner Siebert7, Michael S Lawrence2,3, Ashok S Bhagwat1,8.   

Abstract

Activation-induced deaminase (AID) is a DNA-cytosine deaminase that mediates maturation of antibodies through somatic hypermutation and class-switch recombination. While it causes mutations in immunoglobulin heavy and light chain genes and strand breaks in the switch regions of the immunoglobulin heavy chain gene, it largely avoids causing such damage in the rest of the genome. To help understand targeting by human AID, we expressed it in repair-deficient Escherichia coli and mapped the created uracils in the genomic DNA using uracil pull-down and sequencing, UPD-seq. We found that both AID and the human APOBEC3A preferentially target tRNA genes and transcription start sites, but do not show preference for highly transcribed genes. Unlike A3A, AID did not show a strong replicative strand bias or a preference for hairpin loops. Overlapping uracilation peaks between these enzymes contained binding sites for a protein, FIS, that helps create topological domains in the E. coli genome. To confirm whether these findings were relevant to B cells, we examined mutations from lymphoma and leukemia genomes within AID-preferred sequences. These mutations also lacked replicative strand bias or a hairpin loop preference. We propose here a model for how AID avoids causing mutations in the single-stranded DNA found within replication forks.
© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35524550      PMCID: PMC9122604          DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkac296

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res        ISSN: 0305-1048            Impact factor:   19.160


  85 in total

Review 1.  The molecular events in heavy chain class-switching.

Authors:  P Rothman; S C Li; F W Alt
Journal:  Semin Immunol       Date:  1989-09       Impact factor: 11.130

Review 2.  Somatic hypermutation.

Authors:  M S Neuberger; C Milstein
Journal:  Curr Opin Immunol       Date:  1995-04       Impact factor: 7.486

3.  Passenger hotspot mutations in cancer driven by APOBEC3A and mesoscale genomic features.

Authors:  Rémi Buisson; Adam Langenbucher; Danae Bowen; Eugene E Kwan; Cyril H Benes; Lee Zou; Michael S Lawrence
Journal:  Science       Date:  2019-06-28       Impact factor: 47.728

4.  AID binds to transcription-induced structures in c-MYC that map to regions associated with translocation and hypermutation.

Authors:  Michelle L Duquette; Phuong Pham; Myron F Goodman; Nancy Maizels
Journal:  Oncogene       Date:  2005-09-01       Impact factor: 9.867

5.  Genome-wide mapping of regions preferentially targeted by the human DNA-cytosine deaminase APOBEC3A using uracil-DNA pulldown and sequencing.

Authors:  Ramin Sakhtemani; Vimukthi Senevirathne; Jessica Stewart; Madusha L W Perera; Roger Pique-Regi; Michael S Lawrence; Ashok S Bhagwat
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2019-08-19       Impact factor: 5.157

6.  AID is expressed in germinal center B-cell-like and activated B-cell-like diffuse large-cell lymphomas and is not correlated with intraclonal heterogeneity.

Authors:  I S Lossos; R Levy; A A Alizadeh
Journal:  Leukemia       Date:  2004-11       Impact factor: 11.528

Review 7.  AID in Antibody Diversification: There and Back Again.

Authors:  Yuqing Feng; Noé Seija; Javier M Di Noia; Alberto Martin
Journal:  Trends Immunol       Date:  2020-04-27       Impact factor: 16.687

8.  The EcoCyc Database in 2021.

Authors:  Ingrid M Keseler; Socorro Gama-Castro; Amanda Mackie; Richard Billington; César Bonavides-Martínez; Ron Caspi; Anamika Kothari; Markus Krummenacker; Peter E Midford; Luis Muñiz-Rascado; Wai Kit Ong; Suzanne Paley; Alberto Santos-Zavaleta; Pallavi Subhraveti; Víctor H Tierrafría; Alan J Wolfe; Julio Collado-Vides; Ian T Paulsen; Peter D Karp
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2021-07-28       Impact factor: 5.640

9.  Fast and accurate short read alignment with Burrows-Wheeler transform.

Authors:  Heng Li; Richard Durbin
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2009-05-18       Impact factor: 6.937

10.  COSMIC: the Catalogue Of Somatic Mutations In Cancer.

Authors:  John G Tate; Sally Bamford; Harry C Jubb; Zbyslaw Sondka; David M Beare; Nidhi Bindal; Harry Boutselakis; Charlotte G Cole; Celestino Creatore; Elisabeth Dawson; Peter Fish; Bhavana Harsha; Charlie Hathaway; Steve C Jupe; Chai Yin Kok; Kate Noble; Laura Ponting; Christopher C Ramshaw; Claire E Rye; Helen E Speedy; Ray Stefancsik; Sam L Thompson; Shicai Wang; Sari Ward; Peter J Campbell; Simon A Forbes
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2019-01-08       Impact factor: 16.971

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  1 in total

1.  Development of a versatile high-throughput mutagenesis assay with multiplexed short-read NGS using DNA-barcoded supF shuttle vector library amplified in E. coli.

Authors:  Hidehiko Kawai; Ren Iwata; Shungo Ebi; Ryusei Sugihara; Shogo Masuda; Chiho Fujiwara; Shingo Kimura; Hiroyuki Kamiya
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2022-10-10       Impact factor: 8.713

  1 in total

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