RAD51 is one of six mitotic human homologs of the E. coli RecA protein (RAD51-Paralogs) that play a central role in homologous recombination and repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Here we demonstrate that RAD51 is important for resistance to cisplatin and mitomycin C in cells expressing the BCR/ABL oncogenic tyrosine kinase. BCR/ABL significantly enhances the expression of RAD51 and several RAD51-Paralogs. RAD51 overexpression is mediated by a STAT5-dependent transcription as well as by inhibition of caspase-3-dependent cleavage. Phosphorylation of the RAD51 Tyr-315 residue by BCR/ABL appears essential for enhanced DSB repair and drug resistance. Induction of the mammalian RecA homologs establishes a unique mechanism for DNA damage resistance in mammalian cells transformed by an oncogenic tyrosine kinase.
Highlights d DSB repair, but not NER, coevolves with maximum lifespan (MLS) in rodents d The activity of SIRT6 in stimulating DSB repair coevolves with MLS in rodent species d Five amino acids determine the differential activities of mouse and beaver SIRT6 d Stronger SIRT6 leads to a longer lifespan
Here we characterized this conformation using pure mouse MDR3 P-glycoprotein and natural MgATP and MgADP. Mutants E552A/E1197A, E552Q/E1197Q, E552D/ E1197D, and E552K/E1197K had low but real ATPase activity in the order Ala > Gln > Asp > Lys, emphasizing the requirement for Glu stereochemistry. Mutant E552A/ E1197A bound MgATP and MgADP (1 mol/mol) with K d 9.2 and 92 M, showed strong temperature sensitivity of MgATP binding and equal dissociation rates for MgATP and MgADP. With MgATP as the added ligand, 80% of bound nucleotide was in the form of ATP. None of these parameters was vanadate-sensitive. The other mutants showed lower stoichiometry of MgATP and MgADP binding, in the order Ala > Gln > Asp > Lys. We conclude that the E552A/E1197A mutation arrests the enzyme in a conformation, likely a stabilized NBD dimer, which occludes nucleotide, shows preferential binding of ATP, does not progress to a normal vanadate-sensitive transition state, but hydrolyzes ATP and releases ADP slowly. Impairment of turnover is primarily due to inability to form the normal transition state rather than to slow ADP release. The Gln, Asp, and Lys mutants are less effective at stabilizing the occluded nucleotide, putative dimeric NBD, conformation. We envisage that in wild-type the occluded nucleotide conformation occurs transiently after MgATP binds to both NBDs with associated dimerization, and before progression to the transition state.P-glycoprotein (Pgp) 1 is a plasma membrane protein that confers multidrug resistance by virtue of its ability to exclude hydrophobic compounds from cells in an ATP-dependent fashion. Anticancer drugs and AIDS protease inhibitors are among the numerous compounds transported by Pgp, and there is the realization that a substantial number of future new drug candidates will similarly be transport substrates, so much current interest centers on strategies aimed at disabling or circumventing Pgp. Consisting of two transmembrane domains and two nucleotide binding domains (NBDs), Pgp displays the typical architecture of the ABC transporter family of membrane transporters. There is as yet no reported high resolution structure of Pgp, but structures of several homologous ABC transporters, and of isolated NBDs, have been published recently. For recent reviews of Pgp structure and function see Refs. 1-6.Our laboratory has focused on the mechanism of ATP hydrolysis and ATP hydrolysis-driven transport. Procedures for large scale preparation of pure human MDR1 (7) and mouse MDR3 2 protein (8) have recently facilitated such studies. Earlier work had established that Pgp showed drug-stimulated ATPase activity (9, 10) and that hydrolysis of ATP occurred in both NBDs (11). It was clear from studies with inhibitors N-ethylmaleimide and 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (10, 12-14), mutations in the catalytic sites (15, 16), and vanadate-trapping experiments (17) that the two NBDs cooperated strongly and mandatorily for hydrolysis, and an alternating sites mechanism was proposed in 1995 (18). This mechanism envi...
SUMMARY The accumulation of damage caused by oxidative stress has been linked to aging and to the etiology of numerous age-related diseases. The longevity gene, sirtuin 6 (SIRT6), promotes genome stability by facilitating DNA repair, especially under oxidative stress conditions. Here we uncover the mechanism by which SIRT6 is activated by oxidative stress to promote DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair. We show that the stress-activated protein kinase, c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), phosphorylates SIRT6 on serine 10 in response to oxidative stress. This post-translational modification facilitates the mobilization of SIRT6 to DNA damage sites and is required for efficient recruitment of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1) to DNA break sites and for efficient repair of DSBs. Our results demonstrate a post-translational mechanism regulating SIRT6, and they provide the link between oxidative stress signaling and DNA repair pathways that may be critical for hormetic response and longevity assurance.
The prototypical bacterial RecA protein promotes recombination/repair by catalyzing strand exchange between homologous DNAs. While the mechanism of strand exchange remains enigmatic, ATP-induced cooperativity between RecA protomers is critical for its function. A human RecA homolog, human RAD51 protein (hRAD51), facilitates eukaryotic recombination/repair, although its ability to hydrolyze ATP and/or promote strand exchange appears distinct from the bacterial RecA. We have quantitatively examined the hRAD51 ATPase. The catalytic efficiency (k cat /K m ) of the hRAD51 ATPase was ϳ50-fold lower than the RecA ATPase. Altering the ratio of DNA/hRAD51 and including salts that stimulate DNA strand exchange (ammonium sulfate and spermidine) were found to affect the catalytic efficiency of hRAD51. The average site size of hRAD51 was determined to be ϳ3 nt (bp) for both single-stranded and double-stranded DNA. Importantly, hRAD51 lacks the magnitude of ATP-induced cooperativity that is a hallmark of RecA. Together, these results suggest that hRAD51 may be unable to coordinate ATP hydrolysis between neighboring protomers.
We found recently that the combined mutation of both "catalytic carboxylate" residues (E552A/E1197A) in mouse P-glycoprotein (Pgp) arrested the protein in an "occluded nucleotide conformation", possibly a stabilized dimer of nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs), that binds MgATP tightly at stoichiometry of 1 mol/mol Pgp [Tombline, G., Bartholomew, L., Urbatsch, I. L., and Senior, A. E. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 31212-31220]. Here, we further examine this conformation in respect to its potential involvement in the catalytic pathway. The occluded nucleotide conformation is promoted by drugs. Verapamil markedly accelerated the rate of tight binding of MgATP, whereas it did not effect the rate of dissociation. Mutations in "Q-loop" residues that are thought to interfere with communication between drug and catalytic sites prevented the occluded nucleotide conformation, as did covalent reagents N-ethylmaleimide and 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole, which are known to inhibit ATP hydrolysis by reacting in catalytic sites. Mutations of Walker A Ser and Lys residues in combination with E552A/E1197A had the same effect, showing that interaction of these conserved residues with MgATP is required to stabilize the occluded nucleotide conformation. We present an enzymatic scheme that incorporates this conformation. We propose that upon initial loose binding of MgATP at two nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs), together with drug binding, the NBDs dimerize to form the occluded conformation, with one tightly bound MgATP committed to hydrolysis. The pathway progresses such that the tightly bound MgATP enters the transition state and is hydrolyzed. This work suggests that small molecules or peptides that interact at the NBD dimer interface might effectively disable Pgp catalysis.
It is known from earlier work that two conserved Glu residues, designated "catalytic carboxylates," are critical for function in P-glycoprotein (Pgp). Here the role of these residues (Glu-552 and Glu-1197 in mouse MDR3 Pgp) was studied further. Mutation E552Q or E1197Q reduced Pgp-ATPase to low but still measurable rates. Two explanations previously offered for effects of these mutations, namely that ADP release is slowed or that a second (drug site-resetting) round of ATP hydrolysis is blocked, were evaluated and appeared unsatisfactory. Thus the study was extended to include E552A, -D, and -K and E1197A, -D, and -K mutants. All reduced ATPase to similar low but measurable rates. Orthovanadate-trapping experiments showed that mutation to Gln, Ala, Asp, or Lys altered characteristics of the transition state but did not eliminate its formation in contrast e.g. with mutation of the analogous catalytic Glu in F 1 -ATPase. Retention of ATP as well as ADP was seen in Ala, Asp, and Lys mutants. Mutation E552A in nucleotide binding domain 1 (NBD1) was combined with mutation S528A or S1173A in the LSGGQ sequence of NBD1 or NBD2, respectively. Synergistic effects were seen. E552A/S1173A had extremely low turnover rate for ATPase, while E552A/S528A showed zero or close to zero ATPase. Both showed orthovanadate-independent retention of ATP and ADP. We propose that mutations of the catalytic Glu residues interfere with formation and characteristics of a closed conformation, involving an interdigitated NBD dimer interface, which normally occurs immediately following ATP binding and progresses to the transition state.
We have examined 46 tetramethylrosamine/rhodamine derivatives with structural diversity in the heteroatom of the xanthylium core, the amino substituents of the 3- and 6-positions, and the alkyl, aryl, or heteroaryl group at the 9-substituent. These compounds were examined for affinity and ATPase stimulation in isolated MDR3 CL P-gp and human P-gp-His10, for their ability to promote uptake of calcein AM and vinblastine in multidrug-resistant MDCKII-MDR1 cells, and for transport in monolayers of MDCKII-MDR1 cells. Thioamide 31-S gave KM of 0.087 μM in human P-gp. Small changes in structure among this set of compounds affected affinity as well as transport rate (or flux) even though all derivatives examined were substrates for P-gp. With isolated protein, tertiary amide groups dictate high affinity and high stimulation while tertiary thioamide groups give high affinity and inhibition of ATPase activity. In MDCKII-MDR1 cells, the tertiary thioamide-containing derivatives promote uptake of calcein AM and have very slow passive, absorptive, and secretory rates of transport relative to transport rates for tertiary amide-containing derivatives. Thioamide 31-S promoted uptake of calcein AM and inhibited efflux of vinblastine with IC50’s of ~2 μM in MDCKII-MDR1 cells.
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