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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)
In this report, we demonstrate the feasibility of transforming mouse cells deficient in
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(aprt; AMP:pyrophosphate phosphoribosyltransferase,
EC 2.4.2.7
) to the aprt+ phenotype by means of DNA-mediated gene transfer. Transformation was effected by using unfractionated high molecular weight genomic DNA from Chinese hamster, human, and mouse cells and restriction
endonuclease
-digested DNA from rabbit liver. The transformation frequency observed was between 1 and 10 colonies per 10(6) cells per 20 microgram of donor DNA. Transformants displayed enzymatic activity that was donor derived as demonstrated by isoelectric focusing of cytoplasmic extracts. These transformants fall into two classes: those that are phenotypically stable when grown in the absence of selective pressure and those that are phenotypically unstable under the same conditions.
...
PMID:DNA-mediated transfer of the adenine phosphoribosyltransferase locus into mammalian cells. 28 19
Every bulky lesion in DNA can potentially inhibit the Taq DNA polymerase and thereby decrease the amplification produced in the polymerase chain reaction. We investigated the feasibility of using this inhibition to quantify DNA lesions produced by the anticancer drug cisplatin. Products were detected by electrophoresis followed by ethidium bromide staining. Quantitation was obtained by including [32P]dCTP in the amplification reaction and subsequently assessing the incorporated radioactivity. Hamster genomic DNA was platinated in vitro to defined levels and amplified with primers that produce either a 150, 750 or 2,000 base pair fragment. The degree of inhibition of PCR agreed with the predicted level of DNA platination in each size of fragment, suggesting that the polymerase was inhibited by every cisplatin-induced lesion. This method was used to detect cisplatin-induced lesions in the
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
gene of CHO cells. Cells were incubated with 0-125 microM cisplatin for 2 h, the DNA was purified and subjected to PCR. A significant decrease in amplification of the 2 kbp fragment was observed in DNA from cells incubated with cisplatin at 75 microM. The degree of inhibition agreed closely with the amount of DNA damage in the overall genome as measured by atomic absorption. No change was detected in amplification of the 150 base fragment which can therefore be used to normalize data for any variations between DNA samples. This assay has the same sensitivity as other methods currently used for the analysis of gene-specific damage. The advantage of this assay is that it obviates the need for specific
endonuclease
complexes to recognize and cleave DNA adducts as previously required when analyzing damage in specific genomic sequences.
...
PMID:A polymerase chain reaction-based method to detect cisplatin adducts in specific genes. 195 80
To determine the nature of spontaneous mutational events in cellular genes in hamster cells, mutant
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
aprt
) genes were cloned and the regions to which we mapped alterations were sequenced. A variety of nucleotide changes were found to occur in the 12 mutant genes analyzed. Most mutations were simple base-pair substitutions-transitions (both G X C----A X T and A X T----G X C) and transversions. The only multiple mutation was a simple transition next to a single-base-pair insertion. Of the 12 mutations, 4 were more complex, involving small deletions or duplications. Two of these were similar to previously described deletions in that they occurred between short direct sequence repeats. No hot spots were detected. Three independent mutations were characterized at one restriction
endonuclease
site, although no other mutations were detected in the nucleotides surrounding this site in other mutant strains. At a functional level, sequence changes were either in exons (resulting in missense and, in one instance, nonsense mutations) or at splicing sites.
...
PMID:DNA sequence analysis of spontaneous mutations at the aprt locus of hamster cells. 303 19
In mammalian cells, chromosomal double-strand breaks are efficiently repaired, yet little is known about the relative contributions of homologous recombination and illegitimate recombination in the repair process. In this study, we used a loss-of-function assay to assess the repair of double-strand breaks by homologous and illegitimate recombination. We have used a hamster cell line engineered by gene targeting to contain a tandem duplication of the native
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
) gene with an I-SceI recognition site in the otherwise wild-type APRT+ copy of the gene. Site-specific double-strand breaks were induced by intracellular expression of I-SceI, a rare-cutting
endonuclease
from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. I-SceI cleavage stimulated homologous recombination about 100-fold; however, illegitimate recombination was stimulated more than 1,000-fold. These results suggest that illegitimate recombination is an important competing pathway with homologous recombination for chromosomal double-strand break repair in mammalian cells.
...
PMID:Repair of site-specific double-strand breaks in a mammalian chromosome by homologous and illegitimate recombination. 897 7
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
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