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Guidelines for DNA recombination and repair studies: Mechanistic assays of DNA repair processes

Klein, Hannah L; Ang, Kenny K H; Arkin, Michelle R; Beckwitt, Emily C; Chang, Yi-Hsuan; Fan, Jun; Kwon, Youngho; Morten, Michael J; Mukherjee, Sucheta; Pambos, Oliver J; El Sayyed, Hafez; Thrall, Elizabeth S; Vieira-da-Rocha, João P; Wang, Quan; Wang, Shuang; Yeh, Hsin-Yi; Biteen, Julie S; Chi, Peter; Heyer, Wolf-Dietrich; Kapanidis, Achillefs N; Loparo, Joseph J; Strick, Terence R; Sung, Patrick; Van Houten, Bennett; Niu, Hengyao; Rothenberg, Eli
Genomes are constantly in flux, undergoing changes due to recombination, repair and mutagenesis. In vivo, many of such changes are studies using reporters for specific types of changes, or through cytological studies that detect changes at the single-cell level. Single molecule assays, which are reviewed here, can detect transient intermediates and dynamics of events. Biochemical assays allow detailed investigation of the DNA and protein activities of each step in a repair, recombination or mutagenesis event. Each type of assay is a powerful tool but each comes with its particular advantages and limitations. Here the most commonly used assays are reviewed, discussed, and presented as the guidelines for future studies.
PMCID:6334232
PMID: 30652106
ISSN: 2311-2638
CID: 3594972

Guidelines for DNA recombination and repair studies: Cellular assays of DNA repair pathways

Klein, Hannah L; Bačinskaja, GiedrÄ—; Che, Jun; Cheblal, Anais; Elango, Rajula; Epshtein, Anastasiya; Fitzgerald, Devon M; Gómez-González, Belén; Khan, Sharik R; Kumar, Sandeep; Leland, Bryan A; Marie, Léa; Mei, Qian; Miné-Hattab, Judith; Piotrowska, Alicja; Polleys, Erica J; Putnam, Christopher D; Radchenko, Elina A; Saada, Anissia Ait; Sakofsky, Cynthia J; Shim, Eun Yong; Stracy, Mathew; Xia, Jun; Yan, Zhenxin; Yin, Yi; Aguilera, Andrés; Argueso, Juan Lucas; Freudenreich, Catherine H; Gasser, Susan M; Gordenin, Dmitry A; Haber, James E; Ira, Grzegorz; Jinks-Robertson, Sue; King, Megan C; Kolodner, Richard D; Kuzminov, Andrei; Lambert, Sarah Ae; Lee, Sang Eun; Miller, Kyle M; Mirkin, Sergei M; Petes, Thomas D; Rosenberg, Susan M; Rothstein, Rodney; Symington, Lorraine S; Zawadzki, Pawel; Kim, Nayun; Lisby, Michael; Malkova, Anna
Understanding the plasticity of genomes has been greatly aided by assays for recombination, repair and mutagenesis. These assays have been developed in microbial systems that provide the advantages of genetic and molecular reporters that can readily be manipulated. Cellular assays comprise genetic, molecular, and cytological reporters. The assays are powerful tools but each comes with its particular advantages and limitations. Here the most commonly used assays are reviewed, discussed, and presented as the guidelines for future studies.
PMCID:6334234
PMID: 30652105
ISSN: 2311-2638
CID: 3594962

Genome instability consequences of RNase H2 Aicardi-Goutieres syndrome alleles

Potenski, Catherine J.; Epshtein, Anastasiya; Bianco, Christopher; Klein, Hannah L.
ISI:000504779700005
ISSN: 1568-7864
CID: 4259292

Genomic Copy-Number Loss Is Rescued by Self-Limiting Production of DNA Circles

Mansisidor, Andrés; Molinar, Temistocles; Srivastava, Priyanka; Dartis, Demetri D; Pino Delgado, Adriana; Blitzblau, Hannah G; Klein, Hannah; Hochwagen, Andreas
Copy-number changes generate phenotypic variability in health and disease. Whether organisms protect against copy-number changes is largely unknown. Here, we show that Saccharomyces cerevisiae monitors the copy number of its ribosomal DNA (rDNA) and rapidly responds to copy-number loss with the clonal amplification of extrachromosomal rDNA circles (ERCs) from chromosomal repeats. ERC formation is replicative, separable from repeat loss, and reaches a dynamic steady state that responds to the addition of exogenous rDNA copies. ERC levels are also modulated by RNAPI activity and diet, suggesting that rDNA copy number is calibrated against the cellular demand for rRNA. Last, we show that ERCs reinsert into the genome in a dosage-dependent manner, indicating that they provide a reservoir for ultimately increasing rDNA array length. Our results reveal a DNA-based mechanism for rapidly restoring copy number in response to catastrophic gene loss that shares fundamental features with unscheduled copy-number amplifications in cancer cells.
PMID: 30293780
ISSN: 1097-4164
CID: 3334802

Genome instabilities arising from ribonucleotides in DNA

Klein, Hannah L
Genomic DNA is transiently contaminated with ribonucleotide residues during the process of DNA replication through misincorporation by the replicative DNA polymerases alpha, delta and epsilon, and by the normal replication process on the lagging strand, which uses RNA primers. These ribonucleotides are efficiently removed during replication by RNase H enzymes and the lagging strand synthesis machinery. However, when ribonucleotides remain in DNA they can distort the DNA helix, affect machineries for DNA replication, transcription and repair, and can stimulate genomic instabilities which are manifest as increased mutation, recombination and chromosome alterations. The genomic instabilities associated with embedded ribonucleotides are considered here, along with a discussion of the origin of the lesions that stimulate particular classes of instabilities.
PMCID:5533643
PMID: 28629774
ISSN: 1568-7856
CID: 2604192

Multifunctional Roles of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Srs2 protein in Replication, Recombination and Repair

Niu, Hengyao; Klein, Hannah L
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Srs2 DNA helicase has important roles in DNA replication, recombination and repair. In replication, Srs2 aids in repair of gaps by repair synthesis by preventing gaps from being used to initiate recombination. This is considered to be an anti-recombination role. In recombination, Srs2 plays both pro-recombination and anti-recombination roles to promote the synthesis-dependent strand annealing (SDSA) recombination pathway and to inhibit gaps from initiating homologous recombination (HR). In repair, the Srs2 helicase actively promotes gap repair through an interaction with the Exo1 nuclease to enlarge a gap for repair and to prevent Rad51 protein from accumulating on single-stranded DNA. Finally, Srs2 helicase can unwind hairpin-forming repeat sequences to promote replication and prevent repeat instability. The Srs2 activities can be controlled by phosphorylation, SUMO modification, and interaction with key partners at DNA damage or lesions sites, which include PCNA and Rad51. These interactions can also limit DNA polymerase function during recombinational repair independent of the Srs2 translocase or helicase activity, further highlighting the importance of the Srs2 protein in regulating recombination. Here we review the myriad roles of Srs2 that have been documented in genome maintenance and distinguish between the translocase, helicase and additional functions of the Srs2 protein.
PMCID:5399913
PMID: 28011904
ISSN: 1567-1364
CID: 2374642

Ribonucleotides in DNA: hidden in plain sight

Jinks-Robertson, Sue; Klein, Hannah L
PMID: 25736085
ISSN: 1545-9985
CID: 1481442

Characterization of the Interaction between the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad51 Recombinase and the DNA Translocase Rdh54

Santa Maria, Sergio R; Kwon, Youngho; Sung, Patrick; Klein, Hannah L
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rdh54 protein is a member of the Swi2/Snf2 family of DNA translocases required for meiotic and mitotic recombination and DNA repair. Rdh54 interacts with the general recombinases Rad51 and Dmc1 and promotes D-loop formation with either recombinase. Rdh54 also mediates the removal of Rad51 from undamaged chromatin in mitotic cells, which prevents formation of nonrecombinogenic complexes that can otherwise become toxic for cell growth. To determine which of the mitotic roles of Rdh54 are dependent on Rad51 complex formation, we finely mapped the Rad51 interaction domain in Rdh54, generated N-terminal truncation variants, and characterized their attributes biochemically and in cells. Here, we provide evidence suggesting that the N-terminal region of Rdh54 is not necessary for the response to the DNA-damaging agent methyl methanesulfonate. However, truncation variants missing 75-200 residues at the N terminus are sensitive to Rad51 overexpression. Interestingly, a hybrid protein containing the N-terminal region of Rad54, responsible for Rad51 interaction, fused to the Swi2/Snf2 core of Rdh54 is able to effectively complement the sensitivity to both methyl methanesulfonate and excess Rad51 in rdh54 null cells. Altogether, these results reveal a distinction between damage sensitivity and Rad51 removal with regard to Rdh54 interaction with Rad51.
PMCID:3724653
PMID: 23798704
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 463562

Death becomes her: FBH1, DNA damage and apoptosis

Potenski, Catherine J; Klein, Hannah L
PMCID:3674059
PMID: 23588074
ISSN: 1551-4005
CID: 335592

Tid1/Rdh54 translocase is phosphorylated through a Mec1- and Rad53-dependent manner in the presence of DSB lesions in budding yeast

Ferrari, Matteo; Nachimuthu, Benjamin Tamilselvan; Donnianni, Roberto Antonio; Klein, Hannah; Pellicioli, Achille
Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells with a single double-strand break (DSB) activate the ATR/Mec1-dependent checkpoint response as a consequence of extensive ssDNA accumulation. The recombination factor Tid1/Rdh54, a member of the Swi2-like family proteins, has an ATPase activity and may contribute to the remodelling of nucleosomes on DNA. Tid1 dislocates Rad51 recombinase from dsDNA, can unwind and supercoil DNA filaments, and has been implicated in checkpoint adaptation from a G2/M arrest induced by an unrepaired DSB. Here we show that both ATR/Mec1 and Chk2/Rad53 kinases are implicated in the phosphorylation of Tid1 in the presence of DNA damage, indicating that the protein is regulated during the DNA damage response. We show that Tid1 ATPase activity is dispensable for its phosphorylation and for its recruitment near a DSB, but it is required to switch off Rad53 activation and for checkpoint adaptation. Mec1 and Rad53 kinases, together with Rad51 recombinase, are also implicated in the hyper-phosphorylation of the ATPase defective Tid1-K318R variant and in the efficient binding of the protein to the DSB site. In summary, Tid1 is a novel target of the DNA damage checkpoint pathway that is also involved in checkpoint adaptation.
PMCID:3641649
PMID: 23473644
ISSN: 1568-7856
CID: 2369362