Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:6.5.1.2 (DNA ligase)
2,749 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Epidermal keratinocytes cultured from explants of skin cancer patients, including biopsies from xeroderma pigmentosum patients, were ultraviolet light-irradiated and DNA repair synthesis was measured. Repair capacity was much lower in xeroderma pigmentosum patients than in normal patients. The extent of DNA repair replication did not decline with the age of the normal patient. Treatment with T4N5 liposomes containing a DNA repair enzyme enhanced repair synthesis in both normal and xeroderma pigmentosum keratinocytes in an irradiation- and liposome-dose dependent manner. These results provide no evidence that aging people or skin cancer patients are predisposed to cutaneous malignancy by a DNA repair deficiency, but do demonstrate that T4N5 liposomes enhance DNA repair in the keratinocytes of the susceptible xeroderma pigmentosum and skin cancer population.
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PMID:Enhanced unscheduled DNA synthesis in UV-irradiated human skin explants treated with T4N5 liposomes. 205 85

T4 endonuclease V, a pyrimidine-dimer-specific DNA repair enzyme, was encapsulated in liposomes under mild conditions. The encapsulated enzyme was active, and when applied to ultraviolet (UV)-irradiated human cells in culture, the liposomes increased incision of UV-irradiated cellular DNA, enhanced DNA repair replication, and enhanced survival of UV-irradiated cells. This method is a first step in a new approach for topical application of DNA repair enzymes to human skin to prevent skin cancer.
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PMID:Encapsulation of the UV-DNA repair enzyme T4 endonuclease V in liposomes and delivery to human cells. 247 27

T4N5 liposomes, which contain the DNA repair enzyme T4 endonuclease V, were applied to mouse skin in vivo and added to cultured murine keratinocytes in vitro. The fate of the liposome membrane was followed using a fluorescent, lipophilic dye, and the fate of the enzyme was traced by immunogold labeling, followed by brightfield, fluorescence, or transmission electron microscopy. In vivo, T4N5 liposomes penetrated the stratum corneum, localized in epidermis and appendages of the skin, and were found inside basal keratinocytes. The enzyme was found inside keratinocytes treated in vitro and in the epidermis, hair follicles, and sebaceous glands of topically treated skin. Ultrastructural studies demonstrated the presence of liposomes in the cytoplasm of cells in the epidermis often concentrated in a perinuclear location. The enzyme was present in both nucleus and cytoplasm of keratinocytes and Langerhans cells. Liposomes were found in cells of the lymph nodes draining the site of contact sensitization, in association with topically applied antigen. The results demonstrate that liposomes can deliver encapsulated proteins into cells of the skin in vivo and provide insight into how liposome-enhanced DNA repair reduces UV-induced skin cancer and systemic immunosuppression in mice.
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PMID:Localization of liposomes containing a DNA repair enzyme in murine skin. 793 Jun 68

A new approach to photoprotection is to repair DNA damage after UV exposure. This can be accomplished by delivery of a DNA repair enzyme with specificity to UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers into skin by means of specially engineered liposomes. Treatment of DNA-repair-deficient xeroderma pigmentosum patients or skin cancer patients with T4N5 liposome lotion containing such DNA repair liposomes increases the removal of DNA damage in the first few hours after treatment. In these studies, a DNA repair effect was observed in some patients treated with heat-inactivated enzyme. Unexpectedly, it was discovered that the heat-inactivated T4 endonuclease V enzyme refolds and recovers enzymatic activity. These studies demonstrate that measurements of molecular changes induced by biological drugs are useful adjuvants to clinical studies.
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PMID:Photoprotection by topical DNA repair enzymes: molecular correlates of clinical studies. 1004 8

Exposing human skin to ultraviolet radiation causes DNA damage, sunburn, immune alterations, and eventually, skin cancer. We wished to determine whether liposomes containing a DNA repair enzyme could prevent any of the acute effects of irradiation when applied after ultraviolet exposure. Fifteen human patients with a prior history of skin cancer were exposed to two minimal erythema doses of ultraviolet radiation on their buttock skin. Liposomes containing T4 endonuclease V or heat-inactivated enzyme were applied immediately and at 2, 4, and 5 h after ultraviolet irradiation. Transmission electron microscopy after anti-T4 endonuclease V-staining and immunogold labeling on biopsies taken at 6 h after ultraviolet exposure revealed that the enzyme was present within cells in the skin. Immunohistochemical DNA damage studies suggested a trend toward improved DNA repair at the active T4 endonuclease V liposome-treated test sites. Although the active T4 endonuclease V liposomes did not significantly affect the ultraviolet-induced erythema response and microscopic sunburn cell formation, they nearly completely prevented ultraviolet-induced upregulation of interleukin-10 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha RNA message and of interleukin-10 protein. These studies demonstrate that liposomes can be used for topical intracellular delivery of small proteins to human skin and suggest that liposomes containing DNA repair enzymes may provide a new avenue for photoprotection against some forms of ultraviolet-induced skin damage.
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PMID:Topical treatment with liposomes containing T4 endonuclease V protects human skin in vivo from ultraviolet-induced upregulation of interleukin-10 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha. 1062 Jan 31

Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) is an autosomal recessive photosensitive disorder with an extremely high incidence of UV-related skin cancers associated with impaired ability to repair UV-induced DNA damage. There are seven nucleotide excision repair (NER) complementation groups (A through G) and an NER proficient form (XP variant). XPA, B, D and G patients may also develop XP neurological disease. The laboratory diagnosis of XP can be performed by autoradiography. Recently, the isolation and characterization of the genes responsible for XP have made it possible to use molecular biological techniques to diagnose XP patients, for carrier detection and for prenatal diagnosis, especially in Japanese XPA patients. These techniques include polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and plasmid host cell reactivation assays with cloned XP genes. DNA damage is not repaired by the NER system equally throughout the genome. There are two DNA repair pathways: 1) transcription-coupled repair, and 2) global genome repair. Many factors involved in these pathways are related to the pathogenesis of XP and a related photosensitive disease, Cockayne syndrome. Clinical management consists of early diagnosis followed by a rigorous program of sun protection including avoidance of unnecessary UV exposure, wearing UV blocking clothing, and use of sunblocks on the skin. Although there is no cure for XP, the efficacy of oral retinoids for the prevention of new skin cancers, local injection of interferon, and the external use of a prokaryotic DNA repair enzyme have been reported.
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PMID:Xeroderma pigmentosum--bridging a gap between clinic and laboratory. 1133 1

The most prevalent forms of cancer in humans are the non-melanoma skin cancers, with over a million new cases diagnosed in the United States annually. The portions of the body where these cancers arise are almost exclusively on the most heavily sun-exposed tissues. It is now well established that exposure to ultraviolet light (UV) causes not only damage to DNA that subsequently generates mutations and a transformed phenotype, but also UV-induced immunosuppression. Human cells have only one mechanism to remove the UV-induced dipyrimidine DNA photoproducts: nucleotide excision repair (NER). However, simpler organisms such as bacteria, bacteriophages and some eukaryotic viruses contain up to three distinct mechanisms to initiate the repair of UV-induced dipyrimidine adducts: NER, base excision repair (BER) and photoreversal. This review will focus on the biology and the mechanisms of DNA glycosylase/AP lyases that initiate BER of cis-syn cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers. One of these enzymes, the T4 pyrimidine dimer glycosylase (T4-pdg), formerly known as T4 endonuclease V has served as a model in the study of this entire class of enzymes. It was the first DNA repair enzyme: (1) for which a biologically significant processive nicking activity was demonstrated; (2) to have its active site determined, (3) to have its crystal structure solved, (4) to be shown to carry out nucleotide flipping, and (5) to be used in human clinical trials for disease prevention.
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PMID:Investigations of pyrimidine dimer glycosylases--a paradigm for DNA base excision repair enzymology. 1592 14

To further investigate the use of DNA repair-enhancing agents for skin cancer prevention, we treated Cdk4(R24C/R24C)/Nras(Q61K) mice topically with the T4 endonuclease V DNA repair enzyme (known as Dimericine) immediately prior to neonatal ultraviolet radiation (UVR) exposure, which has a powerful effect in exacerbating melanoma development in the mouse model. Dimericine has been shown to reduce the incidence of basal-cell and squamous cell carcinoma. Unexpectedly, we saw no difference in penetrance or age of onset of melanoma after neonatal UVR between Dimericine-treated and control animals, although the drug reduced DNA damage and cellular proliferation in the skin. Interestingly, epidermal melanocytes removed cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) more efficiently than surrounding keratinocytes. Our study indicates that neonatal UVR-initiated melanomas may be driven by mechanisms other than solely that of a large CPD load and/or their inefficient repair. This is further suggestive of different mechanisms by which UVR may enhance the transformation of keratinocytes and melanocytes.
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PMID:Enhancement of DNA repair using topical T4 endonuclease V does not inhibit melanoma formation in Cdk4(R24C/R24C)/Tyr-Nras(Q61K) mice following neonatal UVR. 1978 33

Human 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase-1 (hOGG1) is the key DNA repair enzyme responsible for initiating repair of UV radiation-induced 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-oxo-dG). Previously we have shown that basal cells in human epidermis are particularly sensitive to UVA-mediated DNA damage probably due to low expression of hOGG1. Here we investigate some aspects of the regulatory role of Cockayne syndrome B (CSB) on hOGG1 expression and function. Cockayne syndrome B and hOGG1 genes were knocked down by miRNA technology in the HaCaT human keratinocyte cell line. Loss of the CSB gene decreased hOGG1 mRNA, and loss of hOGG1 increased CSB, indicating that they influence each other's expression. Protein levels were assessed in cells grown into engineered human skin using immunohistochemistry. This confirmed that CSB knockdown with miRNA reduced hOGG1 protein levels, but hOGG1 knockdown did not influence expression of CSB protein. Using comet assay we found that both hOGG1 and CSB knockdown reduced repair of both UVA- and UVB-induced 8-oxo-dG, consistent with CSB downregulation of hOGG1 mRNA and protein. In contrast, CSB but not hOGG1 knockdown reduced repair of UVB- and UVA-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer photolesions. In engineered human skin, repair of UVA-induced 8-oxo-dG was inhibited by both hOGG1 and CSB knockdown, confirming the functional role of both proteins in cells with 3-D cellular contacts. These findings directly indicate that hOGG1 and CSB influence each other's expression. CSB is required for maintaining hOGG1 enzyme levels and function. Cockayne syndrome B could therefore be required for 8-oxo-dG repair due to its regulatory effect on hOGG1 expression. Cockayne syndrome B but not hOGG1 is also required for efficient repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers. Cockayne syndrome B regulation of DNA repair could contribute to the effect of UVA in causing mutations that lead to skin cancer in humans.
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PMID:Downregulation of Cockayne syndrome B protein reduces human 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase-1 expression and repair of UV radiation-induced 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanine. 2166 83

Imiquimod is a TLR7/8 agonist that has anticancer therapeutic efficacy in the treatment of precancerous skin lesions and certain nonmelanoma skin cancers. To test our hypothesis that imiquimod enhances DNA repair as a mechanism for its anticancer activity, the nucleotide excision repair genes were studied in bone marrow-derived cells. Imiquimod enhanced the expression of xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) A and other DNA repair genes (quantitative real-time PCR analysis) and resulted in an increased nuclear localization of the DNA repair enzyme XPA. This was dependent on MyD88, as bone marrow-derived cells from MyD88(-/-) mice did not increase XPA gene expression and did not enhance the survival of MyD88(-/-)-derived bone marrow-derived cells after UV B exposure as was observed in bone marrow-derived cells from MyD88(+/+) mice. Imiquimod also enhanced DNA repair of UV light (UVL)-irradiated gene expression constructs and accelerated the resolution of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers after UVL exposures in P388 and XS52. Lastly, topical treatment of mouse skin with 5% imiquimod cream prior to UVL irradiation resulted in a decrease in the number of cyclobutane pyridimine dimer-positive APC that were found in local lymph nodes 24 h after UVL irradiation in both wild-type and IL-12 gene-targeted mice. In total, these data support the idea that TLR7 agonists such as imiquimod enhance DNA repair in bone marrow-derived cells. This property is likely to be an important mechanism for its anticancer effects because it protects cutaneous APC from the deleterious effects of UVL.
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PMID:Imiquimod-induced TLR7 signaling enhances repair of DNA damage induced by ultraviolet light in bone marrow-derived cells. 2176 12


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