scholarly journals Molecular Spectroscopic Markers of DNA Damage

Molecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 561 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kamila Sofińska ◽  
Natalia Wilkosz ◽  
Marek Szymoński ◽  
Ewelina Lipiec

Every cell in a living organism is constantly exposed to physical and chemical factors which damage the molecular structure of proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids. Cellular DNA lesions are the most dangerous because the genetic information, critical for the identity and function of each eukaryotic cell, is stored in the DNA. In this review, we describe spectroscopic markers of DNA damage, which can be detected by infrared, Raman, surface-enhanced Raman, and tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopies, using data acquired from DNA solutions and mammalian cells. Various physical and chemical DNA damaging factors are taken into consideration, including ionizing and non-ionizing radiation, chemicals, and chemotherapeutic compounds. All major spectral markers of DNA damage are presented in several tables, to give the reader a possibility of fast identification of the spectral signature related to a particular type of DNA damage.

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Callum J. Campbell ◽  
Ashok R. Venkitaraman ◽  
Alessandro Esposito

AbstractDNA damage in proliferating mammalian cells causes death1, senescence2 or continued survival, via checkpoints that monitor damage and regulate cell cycle progression, DNA repair and fate determination3. Cell cycle checkpoints facilitate tumour suppression by preventing the generation of proliferating mutated cells4, particularly by blocking passage of DNA lesions into replication and mitosis5. While checkpoint non-fidelity permits cells to carry genomic aberrations into subsequent cell cycle phases6, its long-term consequences on lineages descendant from damaged cells remains poorly characterised. Devising methods for microscopy-based lineage tracing, we unexpectedly demonstrate that transient DNA damage to single living cells bearing a negligent checkpoint induces heterogenous cell-fate outcomes in their descendant generations removed from the initial insult. After transiently damaged cells undergo an initial arrest, pairs of descendant cells without obvious cell-cycle abnormalities either divide or die in a seemingly stochastic way. Progeny of transiently damaged cells may die generations afterwards, creating considerable variability of lineage fitness that promotes overall persistence in a mutagenic environment. Descendants of damaged cells frequently form micronuclei, activating immunogenic signalling. Our findings reveal previously unrecognized, heterogenous effects of cellular DNA damage that manifest long afterwards in descendant cells. We suggest that these heterogenous descendant cell-fate responses may function physiologically to ensure the elimination and immune clearance of damaged cell lineages, but pathologically, may enable the prolonged survival of cells bearing mutagenic damage.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Gareth Adrian Prosser

<p>Nitroaromatic prodrugs are biologically inert compounds that are attractive candidates for anti-cancer therapy by virtue of their ability to be converted to potent DNA alkylating agents by nitroreductase (NTR) enzymes. In gene-directed enzyme-prodrug therapy (GDEPT), NTR-encoding therapeutic transgenes are delivered specifically to tumour cells, whereupon their expression confers host cell sensitivity to subsequent systemic administration of a nitroaromatic prodrug. The most well studied NTR-GDEPT system involves reduction of the aziridinyl dinitrobenzamide prodrug CB1954 by the Escherichia coli NTR NfsB. However, low affinity of this enzyme for CB1954 has so far limited the clinical efficacy of this GDEPT combination. The research described in this thesis has primarily sought to address this limitation through identification and optimisation of novel NTR enzymes with improved nitroaromatic prodrug reductase activity. Efficient assessment of NTR activity from large libraries of candidate enzymes requires a rapid and reliable screening system. An E. coli-based assay was developed to permit indirect assessment of relative rates of prodrug reduction by over-expressed NTRs via measurement of SOS response induction resulting from reduced prodrug-induced DNA damage. Using this assay in concert with other in vitro and in vivo tests, more than 50 native bacterial NTRs of diverse sequence and origin were assessed for their ability to reduce a panel of clinically attractive nitroaromatic prodrugs. Significantly, a number of NTRs were identified, particularly in the family of enzymes homologous to the native E. coli NTR NfsA, which displayed substantially improved activity over NfsB with CB1954 and other nitroaromatic prodrugs as substrates. This work also examined the roles of E. coli DNA damage repair pathways in processing of adducts induced by various nitroaromatic prodrugs. Of particular interest, nucleotide excision repair was found to be important in the processing of DNA lesions caused by 4-, but not 2-nitro group reduction products of CB1954, which suggests that there are some parallels in the mechanisms of CB1954 adduct repair in E. coli and mammalian cells. Finally, a lead NTR candidate, YcnD from Bacillus subtilis, was selected for further activity improvement through site-directed mutagenesis of active site residues. Using SOS screening, a double-site mutant was identified with 2.5-fold improved activity over the wildtype enzyme in metabolism of the novel dinitrobenzamide mustard prodrug PR-104A. In conclusion, novel NTRs with substantially improved nitroaromatic prodrug reducing activity over previously documented enzymes were identified and characterised. These results hold significance not only for the field of NTR-GDEPT, but also for other biotechnological applications in which NTRs are becoming increasingly significant, including developmental studies, antibiotic discovery and bioremediation. Furthermore, the in vitro assays developed in this study have potential utility in the discovery and evolution of other GDEPT-relevant enzymes whose prodrug metabolism is associated with genotoxicity.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Gareth Adrian Prosser

<p>Nitroaromatic prodrugs are biologically inert compounds that are attractive candidates for anti-cancer therapy by virtue of their ability to be converted to potent DNA alkylating agents by nitroreductase (NTR) enzymes. In gene-directed enzyme-prodrug therapy (GDEPT), NTR-encoding therapeutic transgenes are delivered specifically to tumour cells, whereupon their expression confers host cell sensitivity to subsequent systemic administration of a nitroaromatic prodrug. The most well studied NTR-GDEPT system involves reduction of the aziridinyl dinitrobenzamide prodrug CB1954 by the Escherichia coli NTR NfsB. However, low affinity of this enzyme for CB1954 has so far limited the clinical efficacy of this GDEPT combination. The research described in this thesis has primarily sought to address this limitation through identification and optimisation of novel NTR enzymes with improved nitroaromatic prodrug reductase activity. Efficient assessment of NTR activity from large libraries of candidate enzymes requires a rapid and reliable screening system. An E. coli-based assay was developed to permit indirect assessment of relative rates of prodrug reduction by over-expressed NTRs via measurement of SOS response induction resulting from reduced prodrug-induced DNA damage. Using this assay in concert with other in vitro and in vivo tests, more than 50 native bacterial NTRs of diverse sequence and origin were assessed for their ability to reduce a panel of clinically attractive nitroaromatic prodrugs. Significantly, a number of NTRs were identified, particularly in the family of enzymes homologous to the native E. coli NTR NfsA, which displayed substantially improved activity over NfsB with CB1954 and other nitroaromatic prodrugs as substrates. This work also examined the roles of E. coli DNA damage repair pathways in processing of adducts induced by various nitroaromatic prodrugs. Of particular interest, nucleotide excision repair was found to be important in the processing of DNA lesions caused by 4-, but not 2-nitro group reduction products of CB1954, which suggests that there are some parallels in the mechanisms of CB1954 adduct repair in E. coli and mammalian cells. Finally, a lead NTR candidate, YcnD from Bacillus subtilis, was selected for further activity improvement through site-directed mutagenesis of active site residues. Using SOS screening, a double-site mutant was identified with 2.5-fold improved activity over the wildtype enzyme in metabolism of the novel dinitrobenzamide mustard prodrug PR-104A. In conclusion, novel NTRs with substantially improved nitroaromatic prodrug reducing activity over previously documented enzymes were identified and characterised. These results hold significance not only for the field of NTR-GDEPT, but also for other biotechnological applications in which NTRs are becoming increasingly significant, including developmental studies, antibiotic discovery and bioremediation. Furthermore, the in vitro assays developed in this study have potential utility in the discovery and evolution of other GDEPT-relevant enzymes whose prodrug metabolism is associated with genotoxicity.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (16) ◽  
pp. 8502-8520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lin Zhang ◽  
Da-Qiang Li

Abstract Microrchidia family CW-type zinc finger 2 (MORC2) is a newly identified chromatin remodeling enzyme with an emerging role in DNA damage response (DDR), but the underlying mechanism remains largely unknown. Here, we show that poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1), a key chromatin-associated enzyme responsible for the synthesis of poly(ADP-ribose) (PAR) polymers in mammalian cells, interacts with and PARylates MORC2 at two residues within its conserved CW-type zinc finger domain. Following DNA damage, PARP1 recruits MORC2 to DNA damage sites and catalyzes MORC2 PARylation, which stimulates its ATPase and chromatin remodeling activities. Mutation of PARylation residues in MORC2 results in reduced cell survival after DNA damage. MORC2, in turn, stabilizes PARP1 through enhancing acetyltransferase NAT10-mediated acetylation of PARP1 at lysine 949, which blocks its ubiquitination at the same residue and subsequent degradation by E3 ubiquitin ligase CHFR. Consequently, depletion of MORC2 or expression of an acetylation-defective PARP1 mutant impairs DNA damage-induced PAR production and PAR-dependent recruitment of DNA repair proteins to DNA lesions, leading to enhanced sensitivity to genotoxic stress. Collectively, these findings uncover a previously unrecognized mechanistic link between MORC2 and PARP1 in the regulation of cellular response to DNA damage.


Science ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 320 (5882) ◽  
pp. 1507-1510 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Soutoglou ◽  
T. Misteli

1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 1656-1662 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Ayares ◽  
D Ganea ◽  
L Chekuri ◽  
C R Campbell ◽  
R Kucherlapati

We studied the ability of mammalian cells to repair single-stranded nicks, gaps, and loops in DNA duplexes. Heteroduplexes prepared from derivatives of the shuttle vector pSV2neo were introduced into monkey COS cells. After replication, the plasmids were recovered and used to transform Escherichia coli. Plasmid DNA from the recovered colonies was tested for repair at each of six different sites. We observed that mammalian cells are capable of repairing single-stranded gaps and free single-stranded ends most efficiently. Regions containing twin loops were recognized, and one of the loops was excised. Portions of the molecules containing small single loops were also repaired. Markers which were 58 nucleotides apart were corepaired with nearly 100% efficiency, while markers which were 1,000 nucleotides or more apart were never corepaired. The mechanisms involved in heteroduplex repair in mammalian cells seem to be similar to those involved in repairing DNA lesions caused by physical and chemical agents.


2007 ◽  
Vol 26 (11) ◽  
pp. 899-906
Author(s):  
Melissa G. Armelini ◽  
Keronninn M. Lima-Bessa ◽  
Maria Carolina N. Marchetto ◽  
Alysson R. Muotri ◽  
Vanessa Chiganças ◽  
...  

Recombinant adenoviral vectors provide efficient means for gene transduction in mammalian cells in vitro and in vivo. We are currently using these vectors to transduce DNA repair genes into repair deficient cells, derived from xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) patients. XP is an autosomal syndrome characterized by a high frequency of skin tumors, especially in areas exposed to sunlight, and, occasionally, developmental and neurological abnormalities. XP cells are deficient in nucleotide excision repair (affecting one of the seven known XP genes, xpa to xpg) or in DNA replication of DNA lesions (affecting DNA polymerase eta, xpv). The adenovirus approach allows the investigation of different consequences of DNA lesions in cell genomes. Adenoviral vectors carrying several xp and photolyases genes have been constructed and successfully tested in cell culture systems and in vivo directly in the skin of knockout model mice. This review summarizes these recent data and proposes the use of recombinant adenoviruses as tools to investigate the mechanisms that provide protection against DNA damage in human cells, as well as to better understand the higher predisposition of XP patients to cancer. Human & Experimental Toxicology (2007) 26, 899—906


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document