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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.1.30.2 (
endonuclease
)
18,621
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fragile X syndrome
is caused by the expansion and concomitant methylation of a CGG repeat in the 5' untranslated region of the FMR1 gene which results in the transcriptional silencing of the FMR1 gene, delayed replication of the FMR1 locus, and the formation of a folate sensitive fragile site (FRAXA) at Xq27.3. The mechanism by which repeat expansion and methylation causes these changes is unknown. An in vivo system in which cells were permeabilized with lysophosphatidylcholine followed by digestion with MspI
endonuclease
was utilized to assess the chromatin conformation at the fragile X locus. The FMR1 gene was inaccessible to MspI digestion in fragile X patients, but not in normal or carrier individuals, confirming that altered chromatin conformation results from the repeat expansion and methylation seen in
fragile X syndrome
.
...
PMID:Nuclease sensitivity of permeabilized cells confirms altered chromatin formation at the fragile X locus. 913 Oct 13
Fragile X syndrome
and associated disorders are characterized by the number of CGG repeats and methylation status of the FMR1 gene for which Southern blot (SB) historically has been required for analysis. This study describes a simple PCR-only workflow (mPCR) to replace SB analysis, that incorporates novel procedural controls, treatment of the DNA in separate control and methylation-sensitive restriction
endonuclease
reactions, amplification with labeled primers, and two-color amplicon sizing by capillary electrophoresis. mPCR was evaluated in two independent laboratories with 76 residual clinical samples that represented typical and challenging fragile X alleles in both males and females. mPCR enabled superior size resolution and analytical sensitivity for size and methylation mosaicism compared to SB. Full mutation mosaicism was detected down to 1% in a background of 99% normal allele with 50- to 100-fold less DNA than required for SB. A low level of full mutation mosaicism in one sample was detected using mPCR but not observed using SB. Overall, the sensitivity for detection of full mutation alleles was 100% (95% CI: 89%-100%) with an accuracy of 99% (95% CI: 93%-100%). mPCR analysis of DNA from individuals with Klinefelter and Turner syndromes, and DNA from sperm and blood, were consistent with SB. As such, mPCR enables accurate, sensitive, and standardized methods of FMR1 analysis that can harmonize results across different laboratories.
...
PMID:A novel methylation PCR that offers standardized determination of FMR1 methylation and CGG repeat length without southern blot analysis. 2417 47
Repetitive DNA sequences, such as those present in microsatellites and minisatellites, telomeres, and trinucleotide repeats (linked to
fragile X syndrome
, Huntington disease, etc.), account for nearly 30% of the human genome. These domains exhibit enhanced susceptibility to oxidative attack to yield base modifications, strand breaks, and abasic sites; have a propensity to adopt non-canonical DNA forms modulated by the positions of the lesions; and, when not properly processed, can contribute to genome instability that underlies aging and disease development. Knowledge on the repair efficiencies of DNA damage within such repetitive sequences is therefore crucial for understanding the impact of such domains on genomic integrity. In the present study, using strategically designed oligonucleotide substrates, we determined the ability of human apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) to cleave at apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites in a collection of tandem DNA repeat landscapes involving telomeric and CAG/CTG repeat sequences. Our studies reveal the differential influence of domain sequence, conformation, and AP site location/relative positioning on the efficiency of APE1 binding and strand incision. Intriguingly, our data demonstrate that APE1
endonuclease
efficiency correlates with the thermodynamic stability of the DNA substrate. We discuss how these results have both predictive and mechanistic consequences for understanding the success and failure of repair protein activity associated with such oxidatively sensitive, conformationally plastic/dynamic repetitive DNA domains.
...
PMID:APE1 incision activity at abasic sites in tandem repeat sequences. 2470 1