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Disease
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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)
Two polymorphisms were detected within exon I of the alpha-L-iduronidase (IDUA) gene both of which create restriction
endonuclease
sites and one of which changes an amino acid. The polymorphisms may be detected by digesting the same 245-bp polymerase chain reaction product. The polymorphisms can be used diagnostically in families with IDUA deficiency (mucopolysaccharidosis type I) and
Huntington
disease, which is closely linked to the IDUA locus.
...
PMID:PCR detection of two RFLPs in exon I of the alpha-L-iduronidase (IDUA) gene. 136 62
Deoxyribonucleic acid of cells undergoing apoptosis is cleaved by a calcium-dependent
endonuclease
into oligonucleosomal-sized fragments. These fragments can be labeled using the enzyme terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase so that the cells can be visualized immunohistochemically. Few investigators have evaluated this method in disease processes of the human central nervous system. The Tdt-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL) technique has been investigated in preliminary studies of a variety of pathologic conditions of the human brain (e.g., gliomas, traumatic brain injury, Parkinson's disease, Parkinson's-Alzheimer's complex, multisystem atrophy, striatonigral degeneration). We focus, however, on
Huntington's disease
(HD) because of the availability of well-characterized pathological stages for study, and also because of the neurodegenerative diseases studied to date, only
Huntington's disease
revealed significant and consistent labeling with this method. This implies a possibly unique nature to the mechanism of cell death in
Huntington's disease
compared to the other neurodegenerative diseases studied. TUNEL+ neurons were found in Grade 1-4 HD neostriatum, while labeled astrocytes were found predominantly in the Grade 1 and 2 cases studied to date. TUNEL+ cells were also found in glioblastoma multiforme and traumatic brain injury. We conclude that while there appear to be several limitations associated with this technique, it may be useful for identifying both apoptosis and necrosis in certain neuropathological conditions.
...
PMID:DNA end labeling (TUNEL) in Huntington's disease and other neuropathological conditions. 764 31
RecA-assisted restriction
endonuclease
(RARE) cleavage is a method to perform sequence-specific cleavage of genomic DNA, and is useful in physical mapping studies. After making two modifications, we have applied this method to mapping large regions of DNA in several cell types, including a notorious gap near the
Huntington
disease (HD) locus on chromosome 4. RARE cleavage fragments were analysed by pulsed field gel electrophoresis and Southern blotting and the distances between cleavage sites determined with accuracy. Using RARE cleavage, the gap measured was less than 60 kilobases in length. RARE cleavage is also a straightforward technique to map the distance from a marker to a telomere. The terminal 1.7 megabases of several HD and control cell lines were mapped with no large differences between cell lines in this region.
...
PMID:Long-range mapping of gaps and telomeres with RecA-assisted restriction endonuclease (RARE) cleavage. 805 78
Animal studies and cell culture experiments demonstrated that posttranscriptional editing of the transcript of the GluR-2 gene, resulting in substitution of an arginine for glutamine in the second transmembrane region (TM II) of the expressed protein, is associated with a reduction in Ca2+ permeability of the receptor channel. Thus, disturbances in GluR-2 RNA editing with alteration of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis could lead to neuronal dysfunction and even neuronal degeneration. The present study determined the proportions of edited and unedited GluR-2 RNA in the prefrontal cortex of brains from patients with Alzheimer's disease, in the striatum of brains from patients with
Huntington's disease
, and in the same areas of brains from age-matched schizophrenics and controls, by using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, restriction
endonuclease
digestion, gel electrophoresis and scintillation radiometry. In the prefrontal cortex of controls, < 0.1% of all GluR-2 RNA molecules were unedited and > 99.9% were edited; in the prefrontal cortex both of schizophrenics and of Alzheimer's patients approximately 1.0% of all GluR-2 RNA molecules were unedited and 99% were edited. In the striatum of controls and of schizophrenics, approximately 0.5% of GluR-2 RNA molecules were unedited and 99.5% were edited; in the striatum of
Huntington
's patients nearly 5.0% of GluR-2 RNA was unedited. In the prefrontal white matter of controls, approximately 7.0% of GluR-2 RNA was unedited. In the normal human prefrontal cortex and striatum, the large majority of GluR-2 RNA molecules contains a CGG codon for arginine in the TMII coding region; this implies that the corresponding AMPA receptors have a low Ca2+ permeability, as previously demonstrated for the rat brain. The process of GluR-2 RNA editing is compromised in a region-specific manner in schizophrenia, in Alzheimer's disease and
Huntington's Chorea
although in each of these disorders there is still a large excess of edited GluR-2 RNA molecules. Disturbances of GluR-2 RNA editing leading to excessive Ca2+ permeability, may contribute to neuronal dysfunction in schizophrenia and to neuronal death in Alzheimer's disease and
Huntington's disease
.
...
PMID:Editing for an AMPA receptor subunit RNA in prefrontal cortex and striatum in Alzheimer's disease, Huntington's disease and schizophrenia. 861 34
At least 12 disorders including
Huntington
disease (HD) are associated with expansion of a trinucleotide repeat (TNR). Factors contributing to the risk of expansion of TNRs and the mechanism of expansion have not been elucidated. Data from Saccharomyces cerevisiae suggest that the flap
endonuclease
FEN1 plays a role in expansion of repetitive DNA tracts. It has been hypothesized that insufficiency of FEN1 or a mutant FEN1 might contribute to the occurrence of expansion events of long repetitive DNA tracts after polymerase slippage events during lagging strand synthesis. The expression pattern of FEN1 was determined, and ubiquitous tissue expression, including germ cells, suggested that FEN1 has the potential to be involved in HD. Fifteen HD parent/child pairs that demonstrated intergenerational increases in CAG length of greater than 10 repeats were examined for possible mutations or polymorphisms within the FEN1 gene that could underlie the saltatory repeat expansions seen in these individuals. No alterations were observed compared to 50 controls, excluding FEN1 as a trans-acting factor underlying TNR expansion. The identification of a candidate gene(s) in HD or other CAG-expansion disorders implicated in TNR instability will elucidate the mechanism of expansion for this growing family of neurological disorders.
...
PMID:The "flap" endonuclease gene FEN1 is excluded as a candidate gene implicated in the CAG repeat expansion underlying Huntington disease. 1126 Feb 14
Huntington's disease
(HD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder with autosomal-dominant inheritance. The disease is caused by a CAG trinucleotide repeat expansion located in the first exon of the HD gene. The CAG repeat is highly polymorphic and varies from 6 to 37 repeats on chromosomes of unaffected individuals and from more than 30 to 180 repeats on chromosomes of HD patients. In this study, we show that the number of CAG repeats in the HD gene can be determined by restriction of the DNA with the
endonuclease
EcoP15I and subsequent analysis of the restriction fragment pattern by electrophoresis through non-denaturing polyacrylamide gels using the ALFexpress DNA Analysis System. CAG repeat numbers in the normal (30 and 35 repeats) as well as in the pathological range (81 repeats) could be accurately counted using this assay. Our results suggest that this high-resolution method can be used for the exact length determination of CAG repeats in HD genes as well as in genes affected in related CAG repeat disorders.
...
PMID:Counting CAG repeats in the Huntington's disease gene by restriction endonuclease EcoP15I cleavage. 1217 11
Previous studies have shown that expansion-prone repeats form structures that inhibit human flap
endonuclease
(FEN-1). We report here that faulty processing by FEN-1 initiates repeat instability in mammalian cells. Disease-length CAG tracts in
Huntington's disease
mice heterozygous for FEN-1 display a tendency toward expansions over contractions during intergenerational inheritance compared to those in homozygous wild-type mice. Further, with regard to human cells expressing a nuclease-defective FEN-1, we provide direct evidence that an unprocessed FEN-1 substrate is a precursor to instability. In cells with no endogenous defects in DNA repair, exogenous nuclease-defective FEN-1 causes repeat instability and aberrant DNA repair. Inefficient flap processing blocks the formation of Rad51/BRCA1 complexes but invokes repair by other pathways.
...
PMID:Nuclease-deficient FEN-1 blocks Rad51/BRCA1-mediated repair and causes trinucleotide repeat instability. 1291 30
Flap EndoNuclease-1 (FEN-1) is a multifunctional and structure-specific nuclease involved in nucleic acid processing pathways. It plays a critical role in maintaining human genome stability through RNA primer removal, long-patch base excision repair and resolution of dinucleotide and trinucleotide repeat secondary structures. In addition to its flap
endonuclease
(FEN) and nick exonuclease (EXO) activities, a new gap
endonuclease
(GEN) activity has been characterized. This activity may be important in apoptotic DNA fragmentation and in resolving stalled DNA replication forks. The multiple functions of FEN-1 are regulated via several means, including formation of complexes with different protein partners, nuclear localization in response to cell cycle or DNA damage and post-translational modifications. Its functional deficiency is predicted to cause genetic diseases, including
Huntington's disease
, myotonic dystrophy and cancers. This review summarizes the knowledge gained through efforts in the past decade to define its structural elements for specific activities and possible pathological consequences of altered functions of this multirole player.
...
PMID:Multiple but dissectible functions of FEN-1 nucleases in nucleic acid processing, genome stability and diseases. 1595
Trinucleotide repeat diseases, such as
Huntington's disease
, are caused by the expansion of trinucleotide repeats above a threshold of about 35 repeats. Once expanded, the repeats are unstable and tend to expand further both in somatic cells and during transmission, resulting in a more severe disease phenotype. Flap endonuclease 1 (Fen1), has an
endonuclease
activity specific for 5' flap structures and is involved in Okazaki fragment processing and base excision repair. Fen1 also plays an important role in preventing instability of CAG/CTG trinucleotide repeat sequences, as the expansion frequency of CAG/CTG repeats is increased in FEN1 mutants in vitro and in yeast cells defective for the yeast homolog, RAD27. Here we have tested whether one copy of yeast FEN1 is enough to maintain CAG/CTG tract stability in diploid yeast cells. We found that CAG/CTG repeats are stable in RAD27 +/- cells if the tract is 70 repeats long and exhibit a slightly increased expansion frequency if the tract is 85 or 130 repeats long. However for CAG-155 tracts, the repeat expansion frequency in RAD27 +/- cells is significantly higher than in RAD27 +/+ cells. This data indicates that cells containing longer CAG/CTG repeats need more Fen1 protein to maintain tract stability and that maintenance of long CAG/CTG repeats is particularly sensitive to Fen1 levels. Our results may explain the relatively small effects seen in the
Huntington's disease
(HD) FEN1 +/- heterozygous mice and myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) FEN1 +/- heterozygous mice, and suggest that inefficient flap processing by Fen1 could play a role in the continued expansions seen in humans with trinucleotide repeat expansion diseases.
...
PMID:Haploinsufficiency of yeast FEN1 causes instability of expanded CAG/CTG tracts in a length-dependent manner. 1738 31
Expansion of CAG/CTG trinucleotide repeats is associated with certain familial neurological disorders, including
Huntington's disease
. Increasing evidence suggests that formation of a stable DNA hairpin within CAG/CTG repeats during DNA metabolism contributes to their expansion. However, the molecular mechanism(s) by which cells remove CAG/CTG hairpins remain unknown. Here we demonstrate that human cell extracts can catalyze error-free repair of CAG/CTG hairpins in a nick-directed manner. The repair system specifically targets CAG/CTG tracts for incisions in the nicked DNA strand, followed by DNA resynthesis using the continuous strand as a template, thereby ensuring CAG/CTG stability. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) is required for the incision step of the hairpin removal, which uses distinct
endonuclease
activities for individual CAG/CTG hairpins depending on their strand locations and/or secondary structures. We discuss the implications of these data for understanding the etiology of neurological diseases and trinucleotide repeat instability.
...
PMID:Incision-dependent and error-free repair of (CAG)(n)/(CTG)(n) hairpins in human cell extracts. 1959 80
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