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Mol. Cells, Vol. 18, No. 1, pp. 100-106 M olecules and Cells / KSMCB 2004 Chromatin Remodeling Facilitates DNA Incision in UV-damaged Nucleosomes Kyungeun Lee, Deok Ryong Kim1, and Byungchan Ahn* Department of Life Sciences, College of Natural Sciences, University of Ulsan, Ulsan 680-749, Korea; 1 Department of Biochemistry, College of Medicine, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju 660-751, Korea. (Received April 17, 2004; Accepted May 26, 2004) The DNA repair machinery must locate and repair DNA damage all over the genome. As nucleosomes inhibit DNA repair in vitro, it has been suggested that chromatin remodeling might be required for efficient repair in vivo. To investigate a possible contribution of nucleosome dynamics and chromatin remodeling to the repair of UV-photoproducts in nucleosomes, we examined the effect of a chromatin remodeling complex on the repair of UV-lesions by Micrococcus luteus UV endonuclease (ML-UV endo) and T4-endonuclease V (T4endoV) in reconstituted mononucleosomes positioned at one end of a 175-bp long DNA fragment. Repair by ML-UV endo and T4-endoV was inefficient in mononucleosomes compared with naked DNA. However, the human nucleosome remodeling complex, hSWI/SNF, promoted more homogeneous repair by ML-UV endo and T4-endo V in reconstituted nucleosomes. This result suggests that recognition of DNA damage could be facilitated by a fluid state of the chromatin resulting from chromatin remodeling activities. Keywords: Chromatin Remodeling; DNA Repair; Reconstituted Nucleosome. Introduction The DNA of eukaryotic cells is packaged into chromatin by association with histone proteins (Khorasanizadeh, 2004; Kornberg and Lorch, 1999). The basic unit of chromatin is the nucleosome core particle. The nucleosomal unit, 1.65 left-handed superhelical turns of DNA wrapped around an octamer of four core histones, is * To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: 82-52-259-2359; Fax:82-52-259-1694 E-mail: [email protected] the first level of chromatin compaction (Luger et al., 1997; Richmond and Davey, 2003). The folding of DNA into nucleosomes creates persistent, tight curvatures of the DNA in which DNA segments are bent into the minor groove, generating structural constraints on the nucleosomes (Richmond and Davey, 2003). Thus, the higher order structure of eukaryotic DNA within nucleosomes restricts its accessibility to DNA-binding proteins, thereby inhibiting transcription and V(D)J recombination; however the effect on DNA repair remains unclear (Fyodorov and Kadonaga, 2001; Green and Almouzni, 2002; Kwon et al., 2000; Narlikar et al., 2001; Smerdon and Conconi, 1999; Thoma, 1999). DNA repair in chromatin has been examined in vivo as well in vitro. The initial biochemical studies, using crude cell extracts to perform repair, showed that repair synthesis is strongly inhibited in reconstituted nucleosomes containing UV damage and in UV-irradiated simian virus 40 (SV40) minichromosomes (Araki et al., 2000). Furthermore, a detailed study of repair at specific sites in a mononucleosome demonstrated that removal of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) is inhibited at most nucleosomal positions (Kosmoski and Smerdon, 1999; Schieferstein and Thoma, 1998). The efficiency of repair of UV damage by photolyase or T4-endonuclase V is severely reduced in reconstituted nucleosomes. Recently, purified human nucleotide excision repair (NER) factors have been used to investigate DNA repair in nucleosomal contexts (Hara and Sancar, 2002; Hara et al., 2000; Liu and Smerdon, 2000; Wang et al., 1991). Damage excision by purified NER factors is also inhibited in both UVirradiated SV40 minichromosomes and reconstituted nu- Abbreviations: CPD, cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer; ML-UV endo, Micrococcus luteus UV endonuclease; NER, nucleotide excision repair; T4-endo V, T4-endonuclease V. Kyungeun Lee et al. / cleosomes. Repair in dinucleosomes is also strongly inhibited by this chromatin structure even when the lesion is located within the linker DNA (Ura et al., 2001). Thus, these studies show that DNA repair in cells is affected by chromatin structure. In principle all DNA processing must require access to specific regions of eukaryotic genomes, and efficient repair of UV damage throughout the genome is needed to prevent mutagenesis. The accessibility of DNA is modulated not only by the dynamic nature of nucleosomes, such as nucleosome mobility, unfolding, and partial disruption, but also by protein complexes that remodel chromatin structures (Widom, 1998). One class of chromatin remodeling machine consists of histone-modifying complexes that covalently alter histone tails. Another class, energy-dependent chromatin remodeling complexes, alters chromatin structures using the energy of ATP hydrolysis (Peterson, 2002). These activities facilitate access to buried sites in chromatin. Thus, reactions are required that permit access of the repair machinery to DNA damage in chromatin in initial repair steps. What processes are involved? Extracts of Xenopus eggs proficient in NER repaired a single UV radiation photoproduct, and photoproducts at separate sites, with variable efficiency (Kosmoski et al., 2001), indicating that activities responsible for stimulating nucleosome repair might be present in the extracts. In support of this notion, chromatin remodeling factors have recently been employed in repair reactions in vitro. The yeast chromatin remodeling factors, ySWI/SNF and yISW2, facilitate NER of acetylaminofluorene-guanine adducts (AAF-G) and (6-4) photoproducts, and photolyase action on UV damage in mononucleosome, respectively (Gaillard et al., 2003; Hara and Sancar, 2002). On the other hand, addition of recombinant ACF (ATP-utilizing chromatin assembly and remodeling factor) to a purified in vitro NER system largely relieved inhibition of repair of dinucleosomal structures specifically at DNA lesions placed in linker DNA (Ura et al., 2001). Thus, ATPdependent chromatin remodeling activities are likely to be required for repair in nucleosomes. Since DNA lesions are generated almost randomly over the genome, a DNA lesion needs to be recognized before chromatin remodeling factors can be recruited. Therefore, damage accessibility depends on the structural properties of the region within nucleosomes containing the DNA lesion. This leads to the prediction that chromatin remodeling complexes may act randomly on chromatin in order to enhance the dynamic properties of nucleosomes and keep the chromatin in a fluid state. To test this we used a eukaryotic chromatin remodeling factor together with bacterial and viral repair enzymes. We show here that the human SWI/SNF complex acts on UV-damaged nucleosomes to facilitate repair by T4-endoV and ML-UV endo. 101 Materials and Methods DNA substrate and proteins Xenopus 5S rRNA gene fragments were isolated from a plasmid (pKS-5S, a kind gift from Dr. Smerdon, WSU, Pullman, USA). The plasmid was linearized with SexAI and the 5′ end of the DNA was labeled with T4 polynucleotide kinase in the presence of [γ-32P]ATP (Amersham Biosciences). The labeled DNA was digested with SalI, and a 175-bp DNA fragment was purified from an agarose gel using a gel extraction kit (Qiagen). T4 endonuclease V was purchased from Trevigene (Gaitherburg, USA). Micrococcus luteus UV endonuclease was a generous gift from Dr. L. Grossman, USA. Human SWI/SNF was a gift from Dr. J. Kwon (Ewha Womans University, Korea). Reconstitution of nucleosome core particles Radiolabeled DNA samples were reconstituted into nucleosomes by salt gradient-mediated histone octamer exchange from chicken erythrocyte core particles as described (Liu et al., 2000). Briefly, endlabeled 5S rDNA (50 ng) was mixed with 42 µg of chicken erythrocyte core particles in 1 M NaCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 0.2 mM PMSF for 30 min at 4°C. The samples were dialyzed in a microdialyzer (PIERCE, membrane MWCO 3500) against, sequentially, buffers containing 0.6 M NaCl and 50 mM NaCl, to complete reconstitution. The fraction of 5S rDNA-reconstituted nucleosomes in the reconstitution reaction was monitored by a DNA mobility shift assay on a 6% nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel in TBE buffer run for 1.2 h at 120 V. To make UV-damaged nucleosomes, naked DNA was UVirradiated and then subjected to in vitro nucleosome reconstitution. UV-irradiation DNA was irradiated on parafilm strips placed on ice at a dose 500 J/m2 using a germicidal lamp (G15WT8, Sylvania) emitting predominantly at 254 nm. UV dose was measured using a UVX radiometer (UVP, USA) equipped with a 254 nm photocell (model UVX-25, UVP, USA). Assay of DNA repair To measure DNA repair activity, naked DNA or reconstituted nucleosomes (1−2 ng) were incubated with ML-UV endo in reaction buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.9, 10 mM MgCl2, 50 mM NaCl, 1 mM DTT. T4 endo V activity was assayed in a different reaction buffer (25 mM NaPO4, pH 6.8, 1 mM EDTA, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM DTT, 0.1 mg/ml BSA) for the indicated times at 37°C. After repair, each sample was combined with stop buffer (5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.6, 10 mM EDTA Proteinase K, 40 µg/µl final concentration) and heated to 42°C for 3 min. Proteins were extracted with phenol/chroloform/isoamylalcohol, and the DNA was precipitated. The precipitated DNA was resuspended in 95% formamide loading buffer before separation on an 8% sequencing polyacrylamide gel (7 M urea in 1× TBE). The gels were dried and exposed to X-ray films, and the densities of the incision bands were quantified with Scion software (NIH image, USA). 102 Repairing DNA Damage in Mononucleosomes / Results Reconstitution of mononucleosomes Nucleosomes were reconstituted onto the 5′-end labeled 5S rDNA by stepwise dialyses from chicken erythrocyte core particles. A schematic diagram of the 175-bp 5S rDNA fragment used in this study is shown Fig. 1A. The ovals represent the two major positions of the 5S nucleosome found previously in larger fragments (Panetta et al., 1998). Gel mobility shift analyses were carried out to assess nucleosome reconstitution of both UV-irradiated and non-irradiated 5S rDNA fragments. When the mixture was analyzed on a nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel, at least 90% of the DNA was folded into mononucleosomes (Fig. 1B). During the assembly of nucleosomes, multiple nucleosome positions would result in a heterogeneous nucleosome population. However, since it has been reported that the Xenopus 5S rRNA gene contains a specific nucleosomepositioning sequence (Liu and Smerdon, 2000; Panetta et al., 1998), the homogeneous nucleosome population obtained in this study points to unique translational setting of mononucleosomes at one end of the 175-bp long DNA fragment (Fig. 1B). In addition, this reconstituted mononucleosome has a 28-bp space at one end which may permit reassembly or sliding of nucleosomes as a consequence of interactions with DNA repair enzymes or chromatin remodeling complexes. Effect of the nucleosome on repair endonucleases Incision of CPDs in nucleosomes by E. coli photolyase and T4-endo V is severely reduced when compared with naked DNA (Kosmoski and Smerdon, 1999; Schieferstein and Thoma, 1998), suggesting a repressive role of nucleosomes on repair processes. However, the dynamic properties of nucleosomes and different mechanisms for damage recognition could contribute to the damage accessibility. Thus, we asked how DNA repair on nucleosomes is affected by repair enzymes and nucleosome positioning. We used ML-UV endo that contains both endonuclease and AP lyase activities but whose damage recognition mechanism is unclear (Grafstrom et al., 1982; Shiota and Nakayama, 1997). In addition, since the nucleosome reconstituted with 175-bp 5S rDNA is known to contain a limited number of molecules with different translational settings, this reconstituted nucleosome has minimal nucleosome dynamics. For repair experiments, ML-UV endo or T4-endoV was incubated with the reconstituted 175-bp 5S rDNA nucleosomes, and the products of digestion by the repair enzymes were displayed by sequencing gel electrophoresis. The bands in lanes 2 and 4 in Fig. 2 show DNA damage-specific incisions at CPD sites on naked UV-damaged DNA. In contrast, the CPDs of the reconstituted nucleosomes in lanes 3 and 6 were resistant to T4-endo V and ML-UV endo and the overall repair efficiency of the two repair enzymes was greatly reduced. A B Fig. 1. Reconstitution of nucleosome core particles. A. Schematic diagram of the reconstituted mononucleosome. The arrow line is the 175-bp fragment and the ovals are the predominant sites of nucleosome formation. Restriction sites used to generate this fragment are shown. B. The 175-bp fragment of the Xenopus 5S rRNA gene containing CPDs was reconstituted into nucleosome core particles by salt-gradient mediated exchange. A characteristic band shift on a native 6% polyacrylamide gel was produced. Lane 1, undamaged naked DNA; lane 2, undamaged nucleosome; lane 3, UV-damaged naked DNA; lane 4, UV-damaged nucleosome. D, naked DNA; RN, reconstituted nucleosome. These results imply that the reconstituted nucleosomes are not displaced either by UV damage or by incubation with the repair enzymes. The extent of incision was not changed when incubation time was increased up to 2 h (data not shown). Effect of SWI/SNF on incision of CPDs in nucleosomes In contrast to the inhibition of incision in nucleosomes in vitro, DNA lesions in nucleosomes are repaired in vivo. Therefore, we asked whether nucleosome remodeling activities can promote CPD repair in UV-damaged nucleosomes. We tested the human SWI/SNF (hSWI/SNF) complex in nucleosome repair with ML-UV endo and T4endo V. Human SWI/SNF is known to enhance the accessibility of nucleosomes to restriction enzymes and transcription factors in vitro without disrupting the histone octamer (Cote et al., 1998; Logie and Peterson, 1997; Owen-Hughes and Workman, 1996; Utley et al., 1997). Nucleosomes composed of UV-damaged DNA were incubated with hSWI/SNF and either ML-UV endo or T4 endo V. The results are shown in Fig. 3. A substantial increase in repair was observed when the nucleosomes were incubated with either ML-UV endo or T4 endo V in Kyungeun Lee et al. 103 / A B Fig. 2. Incision of naked DNA and reconstituted nucleosomes by ML-UV endo (ML) and T4-endoV (T4). The 175-bp 5S rDNA fragments was end-labeled at its SexA 1 site, irradiated with 500 J/m2, reconstituted into nucleosomes, and incubated with the repair enzymes for 120 min. The DNA samples were separated on a DNA sequencing gel. A major translational position of the 5S nucleosome is indicated by the oval on the right side of the gel. the presence of hSWI/SNF (lanes 3 and 6). Clearly, incision of CPDs in the nucleosomes was stimulated by hSWI/SNF (lanes 3 and 6 in Fig. 2). Interestingly, when ML-UV endo was incubated with nucleosomes in the presence of hSWI/SNF, the incision of the nucleosomal DNA was somewhat more efficient than with T4 endo V (Fig. 3B). Although ML-UV endo acts on CPDs as does T4-endoV, the residues for damage recognition are not the same (Shiota and Nakayama, 1997). Thus, this result implies that ML-UV endo may act on CPDs by a different mechanism and that the different extents of incision may be due to different degrees of accessibility of the repair enzymes resulting from chromatin remodeling. It has been shown that yeast SWI/SNF and ISW2 stimulate both repair by human NER (Hara and Sancar, 2002) and by E. coli photolyase (Gaillard et al., 2003). Therefore, the results of the present study support these previous findings. Since the chromatin remodeling factors and repair proteins are from different organisms, specific protein-protein interaction between the remodeling factors and the repair proteins cannot account for the facilitation of repair. Rather, it is likely that remodeling activities alter the dynamic properties of the chromatin structures in a random manner throughout the chromatin. Fig. 3. Effect of SWI/SNF on the kinetics of incision of CPDs in nucleosomes by ML-UV endo and T4-endoV. A. UV-damaged nucleosomes were incubated with the repair enzymes in the presence of 0.48 nM SWI/SNF for 2 h at 30°C. The reaction products were separated on a denaturing sequencing gel (8% in 1× TBE). B. Proportions of CPDs repaired in 120 min. a-e. Nucleosomes incubated with hSWI/SNF and ML-endo (black bars), nucleosomes incubated with hSWI/SNF and T4 (open bars). (Data in Fig. 3B are a mean of two independent experiments.) Discussion We have investigated in vitro repair incision in nucleosomes. The activities of ML-UV endo and T4 endo V were strongly impaired on nucleosomes, suggesting that the accessibility of these enzymes to DNA damage in chromatin is restricted. However, the use of chromatin remodeling factors facilitated repair of the DNA damage in nucleosomes. Thus, our results suggest that chromatin remodeling is necessary in cells to overcome the inhibition of repair in nucleosomes. The initiation of DNA transactions in chromatin im- 104 Repairing DNA Damage in Mononucleosomes / plies that nucleosome positioning is biased to facilitate access by initiation factors. Thus, preferential positioning of nucleosomes could place factor-binding sequences in favorable positions for transcription (Flaus and Richmond, 1998). Furthermore, nucleosomes are intrinsically mobile and permit access to their DNA in vitro (Polach and Widom, 1995; Studitsky et al., 1997). On the other hand, different translational settings of the DNA on nucleosomes can alter the affinity for transcription factors and expose it to restriction enzymes (Anderson et al., 2002). When reconstituted nucleosomes are used in repair, the variability in translational settings of the DNA on the histone octamer surface could permit transient exposure of DNA damage. Indeed, it has been demonstrated that different settings of DNA on a histone octamer permit transient exposure of a uracil residue (Beard et al., 2003), permitting some excision of the uracil by DNA glycosylase. However, when the translational setting of DNA was locked at specific sequences, access of a restriction enzyme and repair proteins was completely prevented (Beard et al., 2003). The 175-bp DNA used in this study has been shown to have a unique preferential translational setting for exonuclease III (Liu et al., 2000). As shown Fig. 1B, only one nucleosome structure was reconstituted in our experiments. If there were multiple translational settings, smeared bands or multiple shifted bands would have been observed. When subjected to UV light, the major UV photoproducts, cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD), are formed. The overall helical axis of DNA containing a CPD bends ~30° toward the major groove and unwinds ~9° (Park et al., 2002). However, an extensive study of the effect of UV irradiation on nucleosome positioning showed no significant change in either translational setting or rotational positioning (Liu et al., 2000). Previous studies have shown that in vitro repair by photolyase and T4 endo V is severely inhibited in nucleosomes (Kosmoski and Smerdon, 1999; Schieferstein and Thoma, 1998). Since both enzymes bend DNA and flip out a pyrimidine dimer into their active sites (Park et al., 1995; Vassylyev et al., 1995), it might be expected that the ability of the repair enzymes to alter DNA structure would permit access to the DNA damage as a result of the dynamics of the nucleosomal DNA. However, such a flip-out mechanism appears to be severely inhibited by the structural constraints of nucleosomes (Kosmoski, 1999; Schieferstein, 1998). Thus, it is of interest to know whether different types of repair enzymes behave differently with regard to recognizing damage in nucleosomes. In this study, we tested Micrococcus luteus UV endonuclease (ML-UV endo) to see whether it could recognize and incise DNA damage on nucleosomes. ML-UV endo is known to have glycosylase and AP lyase activities (Grafstrom et al., 1982; Shiota and Nakayama, 1997) and to incise UV-photoproducts specifically, as do photolyase and T4 endo V. However, the DNA damage recognition mechanism of ML-UV endo is unclear because the conserved structural domain found in proteins that act by a flip-out mechanism has not been found in ML-UV endo. As shown in Fig. 2, incision of DNA damage by ML-UV endo was greatly inhibited on nucleosomes. This result suggests that ML-UV endo is not able to destabilize the nucleosome, and thus to allow it to recognize DNA damage, or to process along the core particle until it encounters a CPD. Furthermore, the E. coli NER protein, the UvrABC endonuclease that uses ATP-hydrolysis to recognize DNA damage, also cannot repair CPDs in nucleosomes (unpublished data), suggesting that the unwinding activity of the UvrAB complex cannot relieve the structural constraints of nucleosomes. Consequently, efficient repair of nucleosomal DNA must require alteration of the nucleosomes with or without the help of remodeling activities. Some chromatin remodeling factors that generally increase the accessibility of nucleosomal DNA to transcription factors, DNase I, and restriction endonucleases (Logie and Peterson, 1997; Utley et al., 1997) and induce octamer sliding (Jaskelioff et al., 2000; Whitehouse et al., 1999) have been found to facilitate DNA repair in nucleosomes. Indeed, the yeast SWI/SNF and ISW2 complexes promote repair of CPDs by E. coli photolyase and human NER proteins (Gaillard et al., 2003). In addition, another chromatin remodeling factor, ACF, is reported to enhance human NER of a lesion in the linker region of dinucleosomes (Ura et al., 2001). Our repair data show that hSWI/SNF stimulates repair along the reconstituted DNA fragment. Therefore, hSWI/ SNF appears to generally alter the accessibility of nucleosomal DNA to UV-DNA glycosylases. Surprisingly, human chromatin remodeling factor can act on chicken nucleosomes, and facilitates repair of CPDs by bacteriophage and bacterial repair enzymes. This implies that chromatin remodeling factors act randomly on the chromatin substrate rather than specifically by interacting with repair proteins. Therefore, the DNA in the nucleosome appears to be sufficiently relaxed, or extended, by the SWI/SNF complex to allow the repair proteins to recognize DNA damage randomly. Two other remodeling factors, ISW1 and ISW2, that are capable of moving nucleosomes to a more central region of DNA, had no effect on repair by T4-endo V (unpublished data). As the DNA fragment has a space of only 28-bp from the edge of the nucleosome, repositioning of the nucleosome in the central region by ISW1 and ISW2 may not be enough to alter the repair pattern, even if they cause nucleosome movement. To defend cells against extensive mutagenesis of the genome, all DNA lesions need to be repaired efficiently. Since DNA lesions are formed randomly over the genome they need first to be recognized before nucleosome re- Kyungeun Lee et al. / modeling activities can be recruited. Therefore, damage accessibility depends on the structural properties of the region containing the DNA lesions (such as nucleosomes, linkers, and nucleosome-free regions) and on DNArelated processes such as whether the DNA is being transcribed or replicated. Since all ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling factors can apparently modulate the structure and settings of nucleosomes, it is possible that they play a more general role in chromatin organization, acting randomly on the chromatin to enhance the intrinsic dynamic properties of the nucleosomes and to keep the chromatin in a ‘fluid’ state. Such general structural alterations of nucleosomes by remodeling activities appear to be required for DNA damage recognition and repair. 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