• 제목/요약/키워드: Double-strand breaks

검색결과 54건 처리시간 0.026초

Gamma-Irradiation and Doxorubicin Treatment of Normal Human Cells Cause Cell Cycle Arrest Via Different Pathways

  • Lee, Seong Min;Youn, BuHyun;Kim, Cha Soon;Kim, Chong Soon;Kang, ChulHee;Kim, Joon
    • Molecules and Cells
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    • 제20권3호
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    • pp.331-338
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    • 2005
  • Ionizing radiation and doxorubicin both produce oxidative damage and double-strand breaks in DNA. Double-strand breaks and oxidative damage are highly toxic and cause cell cycle arrest, provoking DNA repair and apoptosis in cancer cell lines. To investigate the response of normal human cells to agents causing oxidative damage, we monitored alterations in gene expression in F65 normal human fibroblasts. Treatment with ${\gamma}$-irradiation and doxorubicin altered the expression of 23 and 68 known genes, respectively, with no genes in common. Both agents altered the expression of genes involved in cell cycle arrest, and arrested the treated cells in $G_2M$ phase 12 h after treatment. 24 h after ${\gamma}$-irradiation, the percentage of $G_1$ cells increased, whereas after doxorubicin treatment the percentage of $G_2M$ cells remained constant for 24 h. Our results suggest that F65 cells respond differently to ${\gamma}$-irradiation- and doxorubicin-induced DNA damage, probably using entirely different biochemical pathways.

Ku complex suppresses recombination in the absence of MRX activity during budding yeast meiosis

  • Yun, Hyeseon;Kim, Keunpil
    • BMB Reports
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    • 제52권10호
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    • pp.607-612
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    • 2019
  • During meiosis, programmed double-strand breaks (DSBs) are repaired via recombination pathways that are required for faithful chromosomal segregation and genetic diversity. In meiotic progression, the non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) pathway is suppressed and instead meiotic recombination initiated by nucleolytic resection of DSB ends is the major pathway employed. This requires diverse recombinase proteins and regulatory factors involved in the formation of crossovers (COs) and non-crossovers (NCOs). In mitosis, spontaneous DSBs occurring at the G1 phase are predominantly repaired via NHEJ, mediating the joining of DNA ends. The Ku complex binds to these DSB ends, inhibiting additional DSB resection and mediating end joining with Dnl4, Lif1, and Nej1, which join the Ku complex and DSB ends. Here, we report the role of the Ku complex in DSB repair using a physical analysis of recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae during meiosis. We found that the Ku complex is not essential for meiotic progression, DSB formation, joint molecule formation, or CO/NCO formation during normal meiosis. Surprisingly, in the absence of the Ku complex and functional Mre11-Rad50-Xrs2 (MRX) complex, a large portion of meiotic DSBs was repaired via the recombination pathway to form COs and NCOs. Our data suggested that Ku complex prevents meiotic recombination in the elimination of MRX activity.

Mec1 Modulates Interhomolog Crossover and Interplays with Tel1 at Post Double-Strand Break Stages

  • Lee, Min-Su;Joo, Jung Whan;Choi, Hyungseok;Kang, Hyun Ah;Kim, Keunpil
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • 제30권3호
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    • pp.469-475
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    • 2020
  • During meiosis I, programmed DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) occur to promote chromosome pairing and recombination between homologs. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Mec1 and Tel1, the orthologs of human ATR and ATM, respectively, regulate events upstream of the cell cycle checkpoint to initiate DNA repair. Tel1ATM and Mec1ATR are required for phosphorylating various meiotic proteins during recombination. This study aimed to investigate the role of Tel1ATM and Mec1ATR in meiotic prophase via physical analysis of recombination. Tel1ATM cooperated with Mec1ATR to mediate DSB-to-single end invasion transition, but negatively regulated DSB formation. Furthermore, Mec1ATR was required for the formation of interhomolog joint molecules from early prophase, thus establishing a recombination partner choice. Moreover, Mec1ATR specifically promoted crossover-fated DSB repair. Together, these results suggest that Tel1ATM and Mec1ATR function redundantly or independently in all post-DSB stages.

Mitotic Cohesin Subunit Mcd1 Regulates the Progression of Meiotic Recombination in Budding Yeast

  • Lee, Min-Su;Yoon, Sang-Wook;Kim, Keun Pil
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • 제25권5호
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    • pp.598-605
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    • 2015
  • The cohesin complex holds sister chromatids together and prevents premature chromosome segregation until the onset of anaphase. Mcd1 (also known as Scc1), the α-kleisin subunit of cohesin, is a key regulatory subunit of the mitotic cohesin complex and is required for maintaining sister chromatid cohesion, chromosome organization, and DNA repair. We investigated the function of Mcd1 in meiosis by ectopically expressing Mcd1 during early meiotic prophase I in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mcd1 partially regulated the progression of meiotic recombination, sister chromatid separation, and nuclear division. DNA physical analysis during meiotic recombination showed that Mcd1 induced double-strand breaks (DSBs) but negatively regulated homologous recombination during DSB repair; Mcd1 expression delayed post-DSB stages, leading to inefficiencies in the DSB-to-joint molecule (JM) transition and subsequent crossover formation. These findings indicate that meiotic cells undergo Mcd1-mediated DSB formation during prophase I, and that residual Mcd1 could regulate the progression of JM formation during meiotic recombination.

DNA Double-Strand Breaks Serve as a Major Factor for the Expression of Arabidopsis Argonaute 2

  • Lee, Sungbeom;Chung, Moon-Soo;Lee, Gun Woong;Chung, Byung Yeoup
    • 방사선산업학회지
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    • 제10권4호
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    • pp.243-248
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    • 2016
  • Argonaute 2 (AtAGO2) is a well characterized effector protein in Arabidopsis for its functionalities associated with DNA double-strand break (DSB)-induced small RNAs (diRNAs) and for its inducible expression upon ${\gamma}$-irradiation. However, its transcriptional regulation depending on the recovery time after the irradiation and on the specific response to DSBs has been poorly understood. We analyzed the 1,313 bp promoter sequence of the AtAGO2 gene ($1.3kb_{pro}$) to characterize the transcriptional regulation of AtAGO2 at various recovery times after ${\gamma}$-irradiation. A stable transformant harboring $1.3kb_{pro}$ fused with GUS gene showed that the AtAGO2 is highly expressed in response to ${\gamma}$-irradiation, after which the expression of the gene is gradually decreased until 5 days of DNA damage recovery. We also confirm that the AtAGO2 expression patterns are similar to that of ${\gamma}$-irradiation after the treatments of radiomimetic genotoxins (bleomycin and zeocin). However, methyl methanesulfonate and mitomycin C, which are associated with the inhibition of DNA replication, do not induce the expression of the AtAGO2, suggesting that the expression of the AtAGO2 is closely related with DNA DSBs rather than DNA replication.

SET7-mediated TIP60 methylation is essential for DNA double-strand break repair

  • Song Hyun, Kim;Junyoung, Park;Jin Woo, Park;Ja Young, Hahm;Seobin, Yoon;In Jun, Hwang;Keun Pil, Kim;Sang-Beom, Seo
    • BMB Reports
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    • 제55권11호
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    • pp.541-546
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    • 2022
  • The repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) by homologous recombination (HR) is crucial for maintaining genomic integrity and is involved in numerous fundamental biological processes. Post-translational modifications by proteins play an important role in regulating DNA repair. Here, we report that the methyltransferase SET7 regulates HR-mediated DSB repair by methylating TIP60, a histone acetyltransferase and tumor suppressor involved in gene expression and protein stability. We show that SET7 targets TIP60 for methylation at K137, which facilitates DSB repair by promoting HR and determines cell viability against DNA damage. Interestingly, TIP60 demethylation is catalyzed by LSD1, which affects HR efficiency. Taken together, our findings reveal the importance of TIP60 methylation status by SET7 and LSD1 in the DSB repair pathway.

Evolution of CRISPR towards accurate and efficient mammal genome engineering

  • Ryu, Seuk-Min;Hur, Junseok W;Kim, Kyoungmi
    • BMB Reports
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    • 제52권8호
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    • pp.475-481
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    • 2019
  • The evolution of genome editing technology based on CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats) system has led to a paradigm shift in biological research. CRISPR/Cas9-guide RNA complexes enable rapid and efficient genome editing in mammalian cells. This system induces double-stranded DNA breaks (DSBs) at target sites and most DNA breakages induce mutations as small insertions or deletions (indels) by non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) repair pathway. However, for more precise correction as knock-in or replacement of DNA base pairs, using the homology-directed repair (HDR) pathway is essential. Until now, many trials have greatly enhanced knock-in or substitution efficiency by increasing HDR efficiency, or newly developed methods such as Base Editors (BEs). However, accuracy remains unsatisfactory. In this review, we summarize studies to overcome the limitations of HDR using the CRISPR system and discuss future direction.

Roles of Budding Yeast Hrr25 in Recombination and Sporulation

  • Lee, Min-Su;Joo, Jeong Hwan;Kim, Keunpil
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • 제27권6호
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    • pp.1198-1203
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    • 2017
  • Hrr25, a casein kinase $1{\delta}/{\varepsilon}$ homolog in budding yeast, is essential to set up mono-orientation of sister kinetochores during meiosis. Hrr25 kinase activity coordinates sister chromatid cohesion via cohesin phosphorylation. Here, we investigated the prophase role of Hrr25 using the auxin-inducible degron system and by ectopic expression of Hrr25 during yeast meiosis. Hrr25 mediates nuclear division in meiosis I but does not affect DNA replication. We also found that initiation of meiotic double-strand breaks as well as joint molecule formation were normal in HRR25-deficient cells. Thus, Hrr25 is essential for termination of meiotic division but not homologous recombination.

DNA Repair of Eukaryotes Associated with Non-coding Small RNAs

  • Kang, Han-Chul;Yoon, Sang-Hong;Lee, Chang-Muk;Roh, Kyung Hee
    • Journal of Applied Biological Chemistry
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    • 제56권1호
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    • pp.37-42
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    • 2013
  • In eukaryotes, most of the genome are transcribed, however only a small proportion of total transcripts encodes for protein, thus resulting in many of noncoding RNAs. In order to recover DNA damage including DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) eukaryotes have evolved complex mechanisms and these are processed through coordinated mechanisms of protein sensors, transducers, and effectors including RNAs. During recent years, small RNAs have been increasingly studied and gradually considered as key regulators in various aspects of biology. Upon DNA damage, small RNAs including diRNAs (DSB induced RNA) are generated in both plant and human cell lines. Inhibition of their biogenesis has severe influence on DSB repair system.

Fast and Precise: How to Measure Meiotic Crossovers in Arabidopsis

  • Kim, Heejin;Choi, Kyuha
    • Molecules and Cells
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    • 제45권5호
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    • pp.273-283
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    • 2022
  • During meiosis, homologous chromosomes (homologs) pair and undergo genetic recombination via assembly and disassembly of the synaptonemal complex. Meiotic recombination is initiated by excess formation of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), among which a subset are repaired by reciprocal genetic exchange, called crossovers (COs). COs generate genetic variations across generations, profoundly affecting genetic diversity and breeding. At least one CO between homologs is essential for the first meiotic chromosome segregation, but generally only one and fewer than three inter-homolog COs occur in plants. CO frequency and distribution are biased along chromosomes, suppressed in centromeres, and controlled by pro-CO, anti-CO, and epigenetic factors. Accurate and high-throughput detection of COs is important for our understanding of CO formation and chromosome behavior. Here, we review advanced approaches that enable precise measurement of the location, frequency, and genomic landscapes of COs in plants, with a focus on Arabidopsis thaliana.