Co-reporter:Sachini U. Siriwardena, Kang Chen, and Ashok S. Bhagwat
Chemical Reviews 2016 Volume 116(Issue 20) pp:12688-12710
Publication Date(Web):September 1, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.chemrev.6b00296
The AID/APOBEC family enzymes convert cytosines in single-stranded DNA to uracils, causing base substitutions and strand breaks. They are induced by cytokines produced during the body’s inflammatory response to infections, and they help combat infections through diverse mechanisms. AID is essential for the maturation of antibodies and causes mutations and deletions in antibody genes through somatic hypermutation (SHM) and class-switch recombination (CSR) processes. One member of the APOBEC family, APOBEC1, edits mRNA for a protein involved in lipid transport. Members of the APOBEC3 subfamily in humans (APOBEC3A, APOBEC3B, APOBEC3C, APOBEC3D, APOBEC3F, APOBEC3G, and APOBEC3H) inhibit infections of viruses such as HIV-1, HBV, and HCV, and retrotransposition of endogenous retroelements through mutagenic and nonmutagenic mechanisms. There is emerging consensus that these enzymes can cause mutations in the cellular genome at replication forks or within transcription bubbles depending on the physiological state of the cell and the phase of the cell cycle during which they are expressed. We describe here the state of knowledge about the structures of these enzymes, regulation of their expression, and both the advantageous and deleterious consequences of their expression, including carcinogenesis. We highlight similarities among them and present a holistic view of their regulation and function.
Co-reporter:Jesse P. Townes;Weilong Hao;Heewook Lee;Patricia L. Foster;Haixu Tang
PNAS 2016 Volume 113 (Issue 8 ) pp:2176-2181
Publication Date(Web):2016-02-23
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1522325113
The rate of cytosine deamination is much higher in single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) than in double-stranded DNA, and copying the
resulting uracils causes C to T mutations. To study this phenomenon, the catalytic domain of APOBEC3G (A3G-CTD), an ssDNA-specific
cytosine deaminase, was expressed in an Escherichia coli strain defective in uracil repair (ung mutant), and the mutations that accumulated over thousands of generations were determined by whole-genome sequencing. C:G
to T:A transitions dominated, with significantly more cytosines mutated to thymine in the lagging-strand template (LGST) than
in the leading-strand template (LDST). This strand bias was present in both repair-defective and repair-proficient cells and
was strongest and highly significant in cells expressing A3G-CTD. These results show that the LGST is accessible to cellular
cytosine deaminating agents, explains the well-known GC skew in microbial genomes, and suggests the APOBEC3 family of mutators
may target the LGST in the human genome.
Co-reporter:Shanqiao Wei, Sophia Shalhout, Young-Hoon Ahn, Ashok S. Bhagwat
DNA Repair (March 2015) Volume 27() pp:9-18
Publication Date(Web):1 March 2015
DOI:10.1016/j.dnarep.2014.12.006
•A new alkoxyamine that reacts with abasic sites in DNA.•Bioorthogonal click chemistry.•Labeling of abasic sites with biotin or fluorophores.•Higher sensitivity and better biocompatibility than aldehyde-reactive probe.•Inhibition of AP endonuclease 1.•Better killing in combination with methyl methanesulfonate than methoxyamine.A number of endogenous and exogenous agents, and cellular processes create abasic (AP) sites in DNA. If unrepaired, AP sites cause mutations, strand breaks and cell death. Aldehyde-reactive agent methoxyamine reacts with AP sites and blocks their repair. Another alkoxyamine, ARP, tags AP sites with a biotin and is used to quantify these sites. We have combined both these abilities into one alkoxyamine, AA3, which reacts with AP sites with a better pH profile and reactivity than ARP. Additionally, AA3 contains an alkyne functionality for bioorthogonal click chemistry that can be used to link a wide variety of biochemical tags to AP sites. We used click chemistry to tag AP sites with biotin and a fluorescent molecule without the use of proteins or enzymes. AA3 has a better reactivity profile than ARP and gives much higher product yields at physiological pH than ARP. It is simpler to use than ARP and its use results in lower background and greater sensitivity for AP site detection. We also show that AA3 inhibits the first enzyme in the repair of abasic sites, APE-1, to about the same extent as methoxyamine. Furthermore, AA3 enhances the ability of an alkylating agent, methylmethane sulfonate, to kill human cells and is more effective in such combination chemotherapy than methoxyamine.