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Query: EC:2.4.2.7 (
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
)
692
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Somatic cell hybrids constructed between UV-hypersensitive Chinese hamster ovary cell line UV20 and human lymphocytes were used to examine the influence of a human DNA repair gene,
ERCC1
, on UV photoproduct repair, mutability at several drug-resistance loci, UV cytotoxicity and UV split-dose recovery. In hybrid cell line 20HL21-4, which contains human chromosome 19, UV-induced mutagenesis at the
APRT
, HPRT and Na+/K+-ATPase loci was comparable to that in repair-proficient CHO AA8 cells, whereas cell line 20HL21-7, a reduced human-CHO hybrid not containing human chromosome 19, exhibited a hypermutable phenotype at all 3 loci indistinguishable from that of UV20 cells. The response of 20HL21-4 cells to UV cytotoxicity reflected substantial but incomplete restoration of wild-type UV cytotoxic response, whereas responses of UV20 and 20HL21-7 cell lines to UV cytotoxicity were essentially the same, reflecting several-fold UV hypersensitivity. Repair of UV-induced (5-6) cyclobutane dimers and (6-4) photoproducts was examined by radioimmunoassay; (6-4) photoproduct repair was deficient in UV20 and 20HL21-7 cell lines, and intermediate in 20HL21-4 cells relative to wild-type CHO AA8 cells. UV split-dose recovery in 20HL21-4 cells was also intermediate relative to AA8 cells. These results show that the human
ERCC1
gene on chromosome 19 is responsible for substantial restoration of UV survival and mutation responses in repair-deficient UV20 cells, but only partially restores (6-4) UV photoproduct repair and UV split-dose recovery.
...
PMID:UV mutagenesis, cytotoxicity and split-dose recovery in a human-CHO cell hybrid having intermediate (6-4) photoproduct repair. 254 32
To investigate the role of nucleotide excision repair (NER) in the cellular processing of carcinogenic DNA photoproducts induced by defined, environmentally relevant portions of the solar wavelength spectrum, we have determined the mutagenic specificity of simulated sunlight (310-1100 nm), UVA (350-400 nm), and UVB (290-320 nm), as well as of the "nonsolar" model mutagen 254-nm UVC, at the
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
aprt
) locus in NER-deficient (
ERCC1
) Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. The frequency distributions of mutational classes induced by UVB and by simulated sunlight in repair-deficient CHO cells were virtually identical, each showing a marked increase in tandem CC-->TT transitions relative to NER-proficient cells. A striking increase in CC-->TT events was also previously documented for mutated p53 tumor-suppressor genes from nonmelanoma tumors of NER-deficient, skin cancer-prone xeroderma pigmentosum patients, compared to normal individuals. The data therefore indicate that the
aprt
gene in NER-deficient cultured rodent cells irradiated with artificial solar light generates the same distinctive "fingerprint" for sunlight mutagenesis as the p53 locus in NER-deficient humans exposed to natural sunlight in vivo. Moreover, in strong contrast to the situation for repair-component CHO cells, where a significant role for UVA was previously noted, the mutagenic specificity of simulated sunlight in NER-deficient CHO cells and of natural sunlight in humans afflicted with xeroderma pigmentosum can be entirely accounted for by the UVB portion of the solar wavelength spectrum.
...
PMID:Mutagenic specificity of solar UV light in nucleotide excision repair-deficient rodent cells. 855 99
Nucleotide excision repair proteins have been implicated in genetic recombination by experiments in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Drosophila melanogaster, but their role, if any, in mammalian cells is undefined. To investigate the role of the nucleotide excision repair gene
ERCC1
, the hamster homologue to the S. cerevisiae RADIO gene, we disabled the gene by targeted knockout. Partial tandem duplications of the
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
) gene then were constructed at the endogenous
APRT
locus in
ERCC1
- and ERCC1+ cells. To detect the full spectrum of gene-altering events, we used a loss-of-function assay in which the parental APRT+ tandem duplication could give rise to
APRT
- cells by homologous recombination, gene rearrangement, or point mutation. Measurement of rates and analysis of individual
APRT
- products indicated that gene rearrangements (principally deletions) were increased at least 50-fold, whereas homologous recombination was affected little. The formation of deletions is not caused by a general effect of the
ERCC1
deficiency on gene stability, because
ERCC1
- cell lines with a single wild-type copy of the
APRT
gene yielded no increase in deletions. Thus, deletion formation is dependent on the tandem duplication, and presumably the process of homologous recombination. Recombination-dependent deletion formation in
ERCC1
- cells is supported by a significant decrease in a particular class of crossover products that are thought to arise by repair of a heteroduplex intermediate in recombination. We suggest that the
ERCC1
gene product in mammalian cells is involved in the processing of heteroduplex intermediates in recombination and that the misprocessed intermediates in
ERCC1
- cells are repaired by illegitimate recombination.
...
PMID:Recombination-dependent deletion formation in mammalian cells deficient in the nucleotide excision repair gene ERCC1. 937 10
Spontaneous recombination between direct repeats at the
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
) locus in
ERCC1
-deficient cells generates a high frequency of rearrangements that are dependent on the process of homologous recombination, suggesting that rearrangements are formed by misprocessing of recombination intermediates. Given the specificity of the structure-specific Ercc1/Xpf endonuclease, two potential recombination intermediates are substrates for misprocessing in
ERCC1
(-) cells: heteroduplex loops and heteroduplex intermediates with non-homologous 3' tails. To investigate the roles of each, we constructed repeats that would yield no heteroduplex loops during spontaneous recombination or that would yield two non-homologous 3' tails after treatment with the rare-cutting endonuclease I-SCE:I. Our results indicate that misprocessing of heteroduplex loops is not the major source of recombination-dependent rearrangements in
ERCC1
-deficient cells. Our results also suggest that the Ercc1/Xpf endonuclease is required for efficient removal of non-homologous 3' tails, like its Rad1/Rad10 counterpart in yeast. Thus, it is likely that misprocessing of non-homologous 3' tails is the primary source of recombination-dependent rearrangements in mammalian cells. We also find an unexpected effect of
ERCC1
deficiency on I-SCE:I-stimulated rearrangements, which are not dependent on homologous recombination, suggesting that the
ERCC1
gene product may play a role in generating the rearrangements that arise after I-SCE:I-induced double-strand breaks.
...
PMID:Role of the nucleotide excision repair gene ERCC1 in formation of recombination-dependent rearrangements in mammalian cells. 1100 Feb 69
The XpF/Ercc1 structure-specific endonuclease performs the 5' incision in nucleotide excision repair and is the apparent mammalian counterpart of the Rad1/Rad10 endonuclease from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In yeast, Rad1/Rad10 endonuclease also functions in mitotic recombination. To determine whether XpF/Ercc1 endonuclease has a similar role in mitotic recombination, we targeted the
APRT
locus in Chinese hamster ovary
ERCC1
(+) and
ERCC1
(-) cell lines with insertion vectors having long or short terminal non-homologies flanking each side of a double-strand break. No substantial differences were evident in overall recombination frequencies, in contrast to results from targeting experiments in yeast. However, profound differences were observed in types of
APRT
(+) recombinants recovered from
ERCC1
(-) cells using targeting vectors with long terminal non-homologies-almost complete ablation of gap repair and single-reciprocal exchange events, and generation of a new class of aberrant insertion/deletion recombinants absent in
ERCC1
(+) cells. These results represent the first demonstration of a requirement for
ERCC1
in targeted homologous recombination in mammalian cells, specifically in removal of long non-homologous tails from invading homologous strands.
...
PMID:Role of ERCC1 in removal of long non-homologous tails during targeted homologous recombination. 1103 22
Gene targeting by homologous recombination in mammalian cells is an important tool for generating genetically modified mice used for modeling human diseases. Gene targeting approaches are also useful for studying the mechanisms of homologous recombination. We have developed gene targeting methods that we have specifically used to investigate the mechanisms of recombination in cultured mammalian cells. In this chapter, we describe the generation of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell gene disruption ("knockout") mutants in the repair/recombination gene
ERCC1
. Using this approach, we have constructed pairs of isogenic
ERCC1
-proficient and -deficient (null) CHO cell lines and used them as recipients for gene targeting assays in which a hemizygous mutant hamster
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
) locus is corrected by homologous recombination with plasmid vectors containing hamster
APRT
DNA sequence homologous to the target gene in each cell line. The configuration of the targeting vector leads to experimental outcomes in which certain classes of APRTrecombinants are over- or under-represented depending on the repair gene status of the transfection recipient. We describe methods both for targeted gene knockout of
ERCC1
, and for
APRT
targeted gene correction by homologous recombination, and some of our experimental results using these approaches.
...
PMID:Use of gene targeting to study recombination in mammalian cell DNA repair mutants. 1667 80
The UV hypersensitive CHO cell mutant UV41 is the archetypal XPF mammalian cell mutant, and was essential for cloning the human nucleotide excision repair (NER) gene XPF by DNA transfection and rescue. The
ERCC1
and XPF genes encode proteins that form the heterodimer responsible for making incisions required in NER and the processing of certain types of recombination intermediates. In this study, we cloned and sequenced the CHO cell XPF cDNA, determining that the XPF mutation in UV41 is a +1 insertion in exon 8 generating a premature stop codon at amino acid position 499; however, the second allele of XPF is apparently unaltered in UV41, resulting in XPF heterozygosity. XPF expression was found to be several-fold lower in UV41 compared to its parental cell line, AA8. Using approaches we previously developed to study intrachromosomal recombination in CHO cells, we modified UV41 and its parental cell line AA8 to allow site-specific gene targeting at a Flp recombination target (FRT) in intron 3 of the endogenous
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
) locus. Using FLP/FRT targeting, we integrated a plasmid containing an I-SceI endonuclease sequence into this site in the paired cell lines to generate a heteroallelic
APRT
duplication. Frequencies of intrachromosomal recombination between
APRT
heteroalleles and the structures of resulting recombinants were analyzed after I-SceI induction of site-specific double-strand breaks (DSBs) in a non-homologous insertion contained within
APRT
homology. Our results show that I-SceI induced a small proportion of aberrant recombinants reflecting DSB-induced deletions/rearrangements in parental, repair-proficient AA8 cells. However, in XPF mutant UV41, XPF heterozygosity is responsible for a similar, but much more pronounced genomic instability phenotype, manifested independently of DSB induction. In addition, gene conversions were suppressed in UV41 cells compared to wild-type cells. These observations suggest that UV41 exhibits a genomic instability phenotype of aberrant recombinational repair, confirming a critical role for XPF in mammalian cell recombination.
...
PMID:Characterization of CHO XPF mutant UV41: influence of XPF heterozygosity on double-strand break-induced intrachromosomal recombination. 1854 76
The
ERCC1
-XPF structure-specific endonuclease is necessary for correct processing of homologous recombination intermediates requiring the removal of end-blocking nonhomologies. We previously showed that targeting the endogenous CHO
APRT
locus with plasmids designed to generate such intermediates revealed defective recombination phenotypes in
ERCC1
deficient cells, including suppression of targeted insertion and vector correction recombinants and the generation of a novel class of aberrant recombinants through a deletogenic mechanism. In the present study, we examined some of the mechanistic features of
ERCC1
-XPF in processing recombination intermediates by varying gene targeting parameters. These included altering the distance between the double-strand break (DSB) in the targeting vector and the inactivating mutation in the
APRT
target gene, and changing the position of the target gene mutation relative to the DSB to result in target mutations that were either upstream or downstream from the DSB. Increasing the distance from the DSB in the targeting vector to the chromosomal target gene mutation resulted in an
ERCC1
dependent decrease in the efficiency of gene targeting from intermediates presenting lengthy end-blocking nonhomologies. This decrease was accompanied by a shift in the distribution of recombinant classes away from target gene conversions to targeted insertions in both wild-type and
ERCC1
deficient cells, and a dramatic increase in the proportion of aberrant recombinants in
ERCC1
deficient cells. Changing the position of the target gene mutation relative to the DSB in the plasmid also altered the distribution of targeted insertion subclasses recovered in wild-type cells, consistent with two-ended strand invasion followed by resolution into crossover-type products and vector integration. Our results confirm expectations from studies of Rad10-Rad1 in budding yeast that
ERCC1
-XPF activity affects conversion tract length, and provide evidence for the mechanism of generation of the novel, aberrant recombinant class first described in our previous study.
...
PMID:Effects of varying gene targeting parameters on processing of recombination intermediates by ERCC1-XPF. 2112 18