Scientists decipher missing piece of first-responder DNA repair machineOctober 02, 2009BERKELEY, CA - Scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the Scripps Research Institute have uncovered the role played by the least-understood part of a first-responder molecule that rushes in to bind and repair breaks in DNA strands, a process that helps people avoid cancer. With this final piece of the puzzle in place, scientists can better understand how the repair mechanism fends off cancer in healthy people, and conversely, how it helps cancer cells resist chemotherapy. This could enable researchers to develop more effective therapies with fewer side effects. The team deciphered the poorly understood component using innovative x-ray imaging techniques at Berkeley Lab's Advanced Light Source, which generates intense light for scientific research. They found that it extends from the repair machinery like a flexible arm and grabs molecules that are needed to help the machine zip severed DNA strands back together. Their work is published in the October 2, 2009 issue of the journal Cell. "This not only reveals how life works at a fundamental level, but also promises to guide the development of cancer treatments," says John Tainer of Berkeley Lab's Life Sciences Division and the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, CA. Tainer co-led the research with Paul Russell of the Scripps Research Institute. The first-responder machine, a protein complex called Mre11-Rad50-Nbs1 (or MRN for short), homes in on the gravest kind of breaks in which both strands of a DNA double helix are cut. It then stops the cell from dividing and launches an error-free DNA repair process called homologous recombination, which replaces defective genes. If unrepaired, double strand breaks can lead to the proliferation of cancer cells. Unfortunately, MRN's laser-like focus on DNA repair means that it also mends broken DNA in cancerous cells. This sometimes stymies chemotherapy treatments that kill cancer cells by inducing double strand DNA breaks. Because of its key roles - good and bad - scientists have painstakingly studied MRN since 1995 to learn how it works in healthy people, how its mutations promote diseases such as cancer, and to possibly disable it during cancer treatment. Despite more than a decade of effort, a critical part was missing: a protein called Nbs1 that is represented by the 'N' in MRN. To determine Nbs1's function, the team used an Advanced Light Source beamline called SIBYLS, which yields extremely high-resolution images of the crystal structure of a protein via a technique called x-ray crystallography. The beamline is also equipped with small-angle x-ray scattering, which can determine a protein's overall architecture in solution, a critical step that approximates how a protein appears in its natural state - such as inside a cell. The scientists trained these two tools on human and yeast Nbs1 proteins. (DNA repair is so essential to life that many of the molecular machines that perform it have changed little throughout evolution). Importantly, the team studied Nbs1 bound to a partner protein that opens DNA during the first steps of double strand break repair. This enabled them to observe Nbs1 at work. They found that Nbs1 attaches to the MR protein complex precisely where the protein complex converges on the DNA break. Nbs1 also bends in the middle like an elbow to channel molecules to the repair site. These insights offer the best glimpse yet of how Nbs1 works and how damaged Nbs1 can lead to disease. It also suggests ways to monkey wrench MRN so that it can't repair DNA during chemotherapy. Perhaps a molecule can be wedged into Nbs1's elbow joint so it can't bend, rendering the MRN complex useless. "These crystal and solution structures have given us an exciting leap forward in our understanding of the Nbs1 and how defects in the protein cause disease," says Scott Classen of Berkeley Lab's Physical Biosciences Division. Adds Tainer, "Understanding how the body responds to DNA breaks is fundamental for cancer interventions and gene therapies. These results open the door to controlling the repair of DNA breaks for cancer therapeutics and gene targeting." The research was funded by in part by grants from the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health. Berkeley Lab's Advanced Light Source is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science. The SIBYLS beamline is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science and the National Institutes of Health. Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory located in Berkeley, California. It conducts unclassified scientific research and is managed by the University of California for the DOE Office of Science. Visit our website at http://www.lbl.gov Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory |
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| Related DNA Repair Current Events and DNA Repair News Articles Cornell researchers identify a weak link in cancer cell armor The seeming invincibility of cancerous tumors may be crumbling, thanks to a promising new gene therapy that eliminates the ability of certain cells to repair themselves. Single-stranded DNA-binding protein is dynamic, critical to DNA repair Researchers report that a single-stranded DNA-binding protein (SSB), once thought to be a static player among the many molecules that interact with DNA, actually moves back and forth along single-stranded DNA, gradually allowing other proteins to repair, recombine or replicate the strands. October 15, 2009 Loss of Tumor-Suppressor and DNA-Maintenance Proteins Causes Tissue Demise, Penn Study Finds A study published in the October issue of Nature Genetics demonstrates that loss of the tumor-suppressor protein p53, coupled with elimination of the DNA-maintenance protein ATR, severely disrupts tissue maintenance in mice. As a result, tissues deteriorate rapidly, which is generally fatal in these animals. In addition, the study provides supportive evidence for the use of inhibitors of ATR in cancer therapy. Baumann Lab demonstrates role of protein in distinguishing chromosome ends from DNA breaks The Stowers Institute's Baumann Lab has demonstrated how human cells protect chromosome ends from misguided repairs that can lead to cancer. Study supports DNA repair-blocker research in cancer therapy Scientists at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute have uncovered the mechanism behind a promising new approach to cancer treatment: damaging cancer cells' DNA with potent drugs while simultaneously preventing the cells from repairing themselves. Technique enables efficient gene splicing in human embryonic stem cells A novel technique allows researchers to efficiently and precisely modify or introduce genes into the genomes of human embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, according to Whitehead scientists. Protein plays unexpected role protecting chromosome tips A protein specialist that opens the genomic door for DNA repair and gene expression also turns out to be a multi-tasking workhorse that protects the tips of chromosomes and dabbles in a protein-destruction complex, a team lead by researchers at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center reports in the Aug. 13 edition of Molecular Cell. Raising the alarm when DNA goes bad Our genome is constantly under attack from things like UV light and toxins, which can damage or even break DNA strands and ultimately lead to cancer and other diseases. IAU0916: The violent youth of solar proxies steer course of genesis of life One of the hottest topics at this year's XXVIIth General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil involves the study of the astrophysical conditions favourable for the development and survival of primordial life. Conaway Lab uncovers function of potential cancer-causing gene product The Stowers Institute's Conaway Lab has uncovered a previously unknown function of a gene product called Amplified in Liver Cancer 1 (Alc1), which may play a role in the onset of cancer. More DNA Repair Current Events and DNA Repair News Articles |
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