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1.
Commun Biol ; 4(1): 1336, 2021 11 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34824371

ABSTRACT

The 10-subunit TFIIH complex is vital to transcription and nucleotide excision repair. Hereditary mutations in its smallest subunit, TTDA/GTF2H5, cause a photosensitive form of the rare developmental disorder trichothiodystrophy. Some trichothiodystrophy features are thought to be caused by subtle transcription or gene expression defects. TTDA/GTF2H5 knockout mice are not viable, making it difficult to investigate TTDA/GTF2H5 in vivo function. Here we show that deficiency of C. elegans TTDA ortholog GTF-2H5 is, however, compatible with life, in contrast to depletion of other TFIIH subunits. GTF-2H5 promotes TFIIH stability in multiple tissues and is indispensable for nucleotide excision repair, in which it facilitates recruitment of TFIIH to DNA damage. Strikingly, when transcription is challenged, gtf-2H5 embryos die due to the intrinsic TFIIH fragility in absence of GTF-2H5. These results support the idea that TTDA/GTF2H5 mutations cause transcription impairment underlying trichothiodystrophy and establish C. elegans as model for studying pathogenesis of this disease.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans/physiology , DNA Repair/genetics , DNA, Helminth/physiology , Transcription Factors/genetics , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/metabolism , Transcription Factors/metabolism
2.
DNA Repair (Amst) ; 52: 31-48, 2017 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28242054

ABSTRACT

Mercury toxicity mechanisms have the potential to induce DNA damage and disrupt cellular processes, like mitochondrial function. Proper mitochondrial function is important for cellular bioenergetics and immune signaling and function. Reported impacts of mercury on the nuclear genome (nDNA) are conflicting and inconclusive, and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) impacts are relatively unknown. In this study, we assessed genotoxic (mtDNA and nDNA), metabolic, and innate immune impacts of inorganic and organic mercury exposure in Caenorhabditis elegans. Genotoxic outcomes measured included DNA damage, DNA damage repair (nucleotide excision repair, NER; base excision repair, BER), and genomic copy number following MeHg and HgCl2 exposure alone and in combination with known DNA damage-inducing agents ultraviolet C radiation (UVC) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), which cause bulky DNA lesions and oxidative DNA damage, respectively. Following exposure to both MeHg and HgCl2, low-level DNA damage (∼0.25 lesions/10kb mtDNA and nDNA) was observed. Unexpectedly, a higher MeHg concentration reduced damage in both genomes compared to controls. However, this observation was likely the result of developmental delay. In co-exposure treatments, both mercury compounds increased initial DNA damage (mtDNA and nDNA) in combination with H2O2 exposure, but had no impact in combination with UVC exposure. Mercury exposure both increased and decreased DNA damage removal via BER. DNA repair after H2O2 exposure in mercury-exposed nematodes resulted in damage levels lower than measured in controls. Impacts to NER were not detected. mtDNA copy number was significantly decreased in the MeHg-UVC and MeHg-H2O2 co-exposure treatments. Mercury exposure had metabolic impacts (steady-state ATP levels) that differed between the compounds; HgCl2 exposure decreased these levels, while MeHg slightly increased levels or had no impact. Both mercury species reduced mRNA levels for immune signaling-related genes, but had mild or no effects on survival on pathogenic bacteria. Overall, mercury exposure disrupted mitochondrial endpoints in a mercury-compound dependent fashion.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans/drug effects , DNA Damage , DNA Repair , Mercury/toxicity , Methylmercury Compounds/toxicity , Mitochondria/drug effects , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans/metabolism , Caenorhabditis elegans/radiation effects , Cell Nucleus/drug effects , Cell Nucleus/genetics , Cell Nucleus/radiation effects , DNA, Helminth/drug effects , DNA, Helminth/physiology , DNA, Helminth/radiation effects , Homeostasis , Hydrogen Peroxide/toxicity , Kinetics , Mitochondria/genetics , Mitochondria/radiation effects , Ultraviolet Rays
3.
Genome Res ; 14(6): 1107-18, 2004 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15173116

ABSTRACT

Proteins function mainly through interactions, especially with DNA and other proteins. While some large-scale interaction networks are now available for a number of model organisms, their experimental generation remains difficult. Consequently, interolog mapping--the transfer of interaction annotation from one organism to another using comparative genomics--is of significant value. Here we quantitatively assess the degree to which interologs can be reliably transferred between species as a function of the sequence similarity of the corresponding interacting proteins. Using interaction information from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila melanogaster, and Helicobacter pylori, we find that protein-protein interactions can be transferred when a pair of proteins has a joint sequence identity >80% or a joint E-value <10(-70). (These "joint" quantities are the geometric means of the identities or E-values for the two pairs of interacting proteins.) We generalize our interolog analysis to protein-DNA binding, finding such interactions are conserved at specific thresholds between 30% and 60% sequence identity depending on the protein family. Furthermore, we introduce the concept of a "regulog"--a conserved regulatory relationship between proteins across different species. We map interologs and regulogs from yeast to a number of genomes with limited experimental annotation (e.g., Arabidopsis thaliana) and make these available through an online database at http://interolog.gersteinlab.org. Specifically, we are able to transfer approximately 90,000 potential protein-protein interactions to the worm. We test a number of these in two-hybrid experiments and are able to verify 45 overlaps, which we show to be statistically significant.


Subject(s)
DNA-Binding Proteins/physiology , DNA/physiology , Genome, Bacterial , Genome, Fungal , Genome , Proteins/physiology , Amino Acid Sequence/physiology , Animals , Bacterial Proteins/physiology , Binding Sites/physiology , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/physiology , Computational Biology/methods , Computational Biology/statistics & numerical data , Conserved Sequence/physiology , DNA, Bacterial/physiology , DNA, Fungal/physiology , DNA, Helminth/physiology , Databases, Protein , Drosophila Proteins/physiology , Drosophila melanogaster/genetics , Helicobacter pylori/genetics , Protein Binding/physiology , Protein Interaction Mapping/methods , Protein Interaction Mapping/statistics & numerical data , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/physiology , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
4.
Genome Biol ; 5(4): R25, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15059258

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Factors affecting the organization and spacing of functionally unrelated genes in metazoan genomes are not well understood. Because of the vast size of a typical metazoan genome compared to known regulatory and protein-coding regions, functional DNA is generally considered to have a negligible impact on gene spacing and genome organization. In particular, it has been impossible to estimate the global impact, if any, of regulatory elements on genome architecture. RESULTS: To investigate this, we examined the relationship between regulatory complexity and gene spacing in Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster. We found that gene density directly reflects local regulatory complexity, such that the amount of noncoding DNA between a gene and its nearest neighbors correlates positively with that gene's regulatory complexity. Genes with complex functions are flanked by significantly more noncoding DNA than genes with simple or housekeeping functions. Genes of low regulatory complexity are associated with approximately the same amount of noncoding DNA in D. melanogaster and C. elegans, while loci of high regulatory complexity are significantly larger in the more complex animal. Complex genes in C. elegans have larger 5' than 3' noncoding intervals, whereas those in D. melanogaster have roughly equivalent 5' and 3' noncoding intervals. CONCLUSIONS: Intergenic distance, and hence genome architecture, is highly nonrandom. Rather, it is shaped by regulatory information contained in noncoding DNA. Our findings suggest that in compact genomes, the species-specific loss of nonfunctional DNA reveals a landscape of regulatory information by leaving a profile of functional DNA in its wake.


Subject(s)
DNA, Intergenic/physiology , Genome , Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid/physiology , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , DNA, Helminth/physiology , Drosophila melanogaster/genetics , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Gene Expression Regulation/genetics , Gene Order/genetics , Genes, Helminth/genetics , Genes, Helminth/physiology , Genes, Insect/genetics , Genes, Insect/physiology , Physical Chromosome Mapping/methods , X Chromosome/genetics
5.
BMC Bioinformatics ; 5: 6, 2004 01 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14736341

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Numerous tools have been developed to align genomic sequences. However, their relative performance in specific applications remains poorly characterized. Alignments of protein-coding sequences typically have been benchmarked against "correct" alignments inferred from structural data. For noncoding sequences, where such independent validation is lacking, simulation provides an effective means to generate "correct" alignments with which to benchmark alignment tools. RESULTS: Using rates of noncoding sequence evolution estimated from the genus Drosophila, we simulated alignments over a range of divergence times under varying models incorporating point substitution, insertion/deletion events, and short blocks of constrained sequences such as those found in cis-regulatory regions. We then compared "correct" alignments generated by a modified version of the ROSE simulation platform to alignments of the simulated derived sequences produced by eight pairwise alignment tools (Avid, BlastZ, Chaos, ClustalW, DiAlign, Lagan, Needle, and WABA) to determine the off-the-shelf performance of each tool. As expected, the ability to align noncoding sequences accurately decreases with increasing divergence for all tools, and declines faster in the presence of insertion/deletion evolution. Global alignment tools (Avid, ClustalW, Lagan, and Needle) typically have higher sensitivity over entire noncoding sequences as well as in constrained sequences. Local tools (BlastZ, Chaos, and WABA) have lower overall sensitivity as a consequence of incomplete coverage, but have high specificity to detect constrained sequences as well as high sensitivity within the subset of sequences they align. Tools such as DiAlign, which generate both local and global outputs, produce alignments of constrained sequences with both high sensitivity and specificity for divergence distances in the range of 1.25-3.0 substitutions per site. CONCLUSION: For species with genomic properties similar to Drosophila, we conclude that a single pair of optimally diverged species analyzed with a high performance alignment tool can yield accurate and specific alignments of functionally constrained noncoding sequences. Further algorithm development, optimization of alignment parameters, and benchmarking studies will be necessary to extract the maximal biological information from alignments of functional noncoding DNA.


Subject(s)
Benchmarking/methods , DNA, Intergenic/genetics , Sequence Alignment/methods , Sequence Alignment/standards , Animals , Caenorhabditis/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Computer Simulation , DNA, Helminth/genetics , DNA, Helminth/physiology , DNA, Intergenic/physiology , Drosophila/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Genomics/methods , Genomics/standards , Humans , Mice , Sensitivity and Specificity , Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid
6.
FEBS Lett ; 555(2): 250-6, 2003 Dec 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14644423

ABSTRACT

Caenorhabditis elegans germ cell proliferation and development were severely damaged in second generation dna-2 homozygotes. Even in the first generation, a much higher incidence of aberrant chromosomes in oocytes and resultantly higher embryonic lethality were found vs. wild type, when DNA breaks were induced by gamma-rays or camptothecin. The deficiency of dna-2 in combination with RNA interference on mre-11 gene expression synergistically aggravated germ-line development, especially oocyte formation. These results suggest that C. elegans Dna-2 is involved in a DNA repair pathway paralleling homologous recombination or non-homologous end joining with mre-11 participation.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , DNA Repair , DNA, Helminth/physiology , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans/embryology , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/metabolism , Camptothecin/pharmacology , Chromosome Aberrations , DNA Damage/genetics , Gamma Rays , Genes, Lethal , Germ Cells/metabolism , Heterozygote , Homozygote , Oocytes/cytology , Oocytes/metabolism , Ovum/physiology , Ovum/radiation effects , Phenotype , RNA Interference , Temperature
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