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Repair mechanisms 1. Reversal of damage 2. Excision repair 3. Mismatch repair 4. Recombination repair 5. Error-prone repair 6. Restriction-modification systems 1. Reversal of damage • Enzymatically un-do the damage • a) Photoreactivation • b) Removal of methyl groups Photolyase breaks apart pyrimidine dimers O O 5 CH3 HN O N 6 H 5 CH3 HN O N 6 H Thymine Thymine d-ribose d-ribose Photolyase breaks the bonds between the dTs 1a. Photoreactivation • Photolyase: binds a pyrimidine dimers and catalyzes a photochemical reaction • Breaks the cyclobutane ring and reforms two adjacent T’s • 2 subunits, encoded by phrA and phrB. 2. Excision repair • General Process: – remove damage (base or DNA backbone) – ss nick/gap provides 3’OH for DNA Pol I initiation – DNA ligase seals nick • Nucleotide excision repair: – Cut out a segment of DNA around a damaged base. • Base excision repair: – Cut out the base, then cut next to the apurinic/apyrimidinic site, and let DNA Pol I repair Discovery of mutants defective in DNA repair 100wt 50u vr - uvr - % S u r v ivo r s 10D o se o f U V polA mutants are defective in repair wt polA mutant DNA synthesis in vitro Survival after UV in vivo UvrABC excision repair damaged site 5' 3' (UvrA) 2UvrB recognizes the damaged site A A B 5' 3' ATP (UvrA) dissociates 2 B 5' 3' + A A Cleavage and helicase B 5' 3' UvrC binds UvrB at the damaged site B C 5' 3' ATP UvrBC nicks both 5' and 3' to the damaged site B C 5' 3' ATP 5' 3' UvrD (helicase II) unwinds and liberates the damaged fragment + B C Fill in with polymerase and ligate 5' 3' dNTPs DNA polymerase I fills in the gap 5' 3' NAD 5' 3' DNA ligase Mutations in excision repair in eukaryotes can cause xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) Human Gene XPA XPB XPC XPD XPE XPF XPG Protein Function Binds damaged DNA Helicase, Component of TFIIH DNA damage sensor Helicase, Component of TFIIH Binds damaged DNA Works with ERRCI to cut DNA Cuts DNA Analogous to E. coli: UvrA/UvrB UvrD UvrD UvrA/UvrB UvrB/UvrC UvrB/UvrC 2b. Base excision repair Incorrect or damaged base P P A T P P G C P T A P P U A P P C G P P A T P P T A P P P A T P G C P P C G P P P G C P P G C P P T A P A T P P P A T P P C G P P G C P P T A P + A T P U P AP endonuclease cuts the phosphodiester backbone 5' to the AP site. P P OH P C G A P A T P P C G A T A P P P primer P Glycosylase recognizes damaged base and cuts the bond to the sugar in the DNA backbone. P G C G C P AP site P P P P G C P P A T P P C G P P G C P P T A P A T P P Excision and filling in by DNA PolI primer P P A T P G C P P P OH T A P C G A P P P P G C P P A T P P C G P P G C P P T A P A T P P DNA pol ymerase I removes the damaged strand (5' to 3' exonuclease) and fills in correct sequence (polymerase). P P A T P G C P P T A P P T A P P C G P P A T P G C P P T A P P A T P P P C G P P OH G C P nick T A P A T P P DNA ligase seals the nick P P C G T A P G C P NAD P P P P G C P P A T P P C G P P G C P P T A P Repaired DNA A T P P 3. Mismatch repair • Action of DNA polymerase III (including proofreading exonuclease) results in 1 misincorporation per 108 bases synthesized. • Mismatch repair reduces this rate to 1 change in every 1010 or 1011 bases. • Recognize mispaired bases in DNA, e.g. GT or A-C base pairs • These do not cause large distortions in the helix: the mismatch repair system apparently reads the sequence of bases in the DNA. Role of methylation in discriminating parental and progeny strands • dam methylase acts on the A of GATC (note that this sequence is symmetical or pseudopalindromic). • Methylation is delayed for several minutes after replication. • Mismatch repair works on the un-methylated strand (which is newly replicated) so that replication errors are removed preferentially. Action of MutS, MutL, MutH • MutS: recognizes the mismatch (heteroduplex) • MutL: a dimer; in presence of ATP, binds to MutS-heteroduplex complex to activate MutH • MutH: endonuclease that cleaves 5' to the G in an unmethylated GATC, leaves a nick MutH, L, S action in mismatch repair #1 MutH, L, S action in mismatch repair #2 Mismatch repair: Excision of the misincorporated nucleotide Eukaryotic homologs in mismatch repair • Human homologs to mutL (hMLH1) and mutS (hMSH2, hMSH1) have been discovered, because ... • Mutations in them can cause one of the most common hereditary cancers, hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC). 4. Recombination repair: retrieval of information from a homologous chromosome Recombination repair, a system for retrieval of information damaged site 5' 3' 5' 3' Replication past a damaged site leaves a gap on the opposite strand plus one correct copy. Gap is repaired by retrieving DNA from the correct copy of the chromosome, using DNA recombination. 5' 3' 5' 3' Damaged site can be repaired by excision repair (e.g. UvrABC) Gap in the correct copy is filled in by DNA polymerase. 5' 3' 5. Error-prone repair • Last resort for DNA repair, e.g when repair has not occurred prior to replication. How does the polymerase copy across a non-pairing, mutated base, or an apyrimidinic/apurinic site? – DNA polymerase III usually dissociates at a nick or a lesion. – But replication can occur past these lesions, especially during the SOS reponse ("Save Our Ship"). • This translesion synthesis incorporates random nucleotides, so they are almost always mutations (3/4 times) Role of umuC and umuD genes in error-prone repair • Named for the UV nonmutable phenotype of mutants with defects in these genes. • Needed for bypass synthesis; mechanism is under investigation. E.g. these proteins may reduce the template requirement for the polymerase. • UmuD protein is proteolytically activated by LexA. UmuC, UmuD in error-prone repair UV damage DNA replication DNA Pol III UmuD 2 UmuC beta UV damage, increase RecA:ssDNA Activate protease Induce umuC+, umuD+ epsilon DNA damage checkpoint control Graham Walker Translesional synthesis (error-prone) UmuD’2 UmuC Pol III alpha Polymerase for translesional synthesis SOS response is controlled by LexA and SOS response is controlled by LexA and RecA RecA OFF LexA LexA recA Repressed LexA lexA target gene e.g. recA, lexA, uvrA, uvrB, umuC RecA ON RecA is activated in the presence of damaged DNA. It serves as a co-protease to activate a latent, self-cleaving proteolytic activity in LexA, thereby removing the repressor from SOS inducible genes. RecA cleaved LexA + RecA RecA RecA LexA e.g. RecA, UvrA, UvrB, UmuC active proteins de-repressed recA lexA target gene LexA, RecA in the SOS response