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Repair of Topoisomerase-Mediated DNA Damage in Bacteriophage T4
Bradley A. Stohra and Kenneth N. Kreuzeraa Departments of Microbiology and Biochemistry, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710
Corresponding author: Kenneth N. Kreuzer, Box 3020, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710., kenneth.kreuzer{at}duke.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: R. MAURER
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Type II topoisomerase inhibitors are used to treat both tumors and bacterial infections. These inhibitors stabilize covalent DNA-topoisomerase cleavage complexes that ultimately cause lethal DNA damage. A functional recombinational repair apparatus decreases sensitivity to these drugs, suggesting that topoisomerase-mediated DNA damage is amenable to such repair. Using a bacteriophage T4 model system, we have developed a novel in vivo plasmid-based assay that allows physical analysis of the repair products from one particular topoisomerase cleavage site. We show that the antitumor agent 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulphon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA) stabilizes the T4 type II topoisomerase at the strong topoisomerase cleavage site on the plasmid, thereby stimulating recombinational repair. The resulting m-AMSA-dependent repair products do not form in the absence of functional topoisomerase and appear at lower drug concentrations with a drug-hypersensitive topoisomerase mutant. The appearance of repair products requires that the plasmid contain a T4 origin of replication. Finally, genetic analyses demonstrate that repair product formation is absolutely dependent on genes 32 and 46, largely dependent on genes uvsX and uvsY, and only partly dependent on gene 49. Very similar genetic requirements are observed for repair of endonuclease-generated double-strand breaks, suggesting mechanistic similarity between the two repair pathways.
THE type II topoisomerases play critical roles in many aspects of DNA metabolism, including replication, transcription, and chromosome segregation (for reviews, see ![]()
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Extensive research has been devoted to understanding how drug-stabilized cleavage complexes cause cell death, but the mechanism remains poorly understood. The cleavage complexes themselves are readily reversible upon drug removal and are necessary but not sufficient for cytotoxicity. These reversible cleavage complexes can apparently be converted into cytotoxic lesions, and the DNA replication machinery has been implicated in this conversion. First, cells in S phase are more sensitive to topoisomerase inhibitors than cells in G1 phase, and this increased sensitivity is abrogated by inhibiting DNA replication with aphidicolin (![]()
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During the conversion of reversible cleavage complexes into cytotoxic DNA lesions, the fate of the topoisomerase protein covalently linked to the 5' DNA ends is unclear. A phosphodiesterase that specifically cleaves yeast type I topoisomerases from 3' DNA ends has been found, and certain mutant cells lacking this enzyme are hypersensitive to the type I topoisomerase inhibitor camptothecin (![]()
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Assuming that the drug-stabilized cleavage complex is ultimately converted into an irreversible DNA break, cell death will follow unless the lesion is repaired. Evidence has accumulated in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems that recombinational repair is involved in this process. Treating yeast and mammalian cells with type II topoisomerase inhibitors induces homologous recombination (![]()
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Bacteriophage T4 provides a valuable model system in which to study recombinational repair mechanisms (![]()
3' DNase activity and the gp46/47 (gene products 46 and 47) complex have been implicated (![]()
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Bacteriophage T4 is also a valuable model system for studying the mechanism of type II topoisomerase inhibitors (for review, see ![]()
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In this study, we present a novel plasmid-based assay to monitor recombinational repair from one particular m-AMSA-inducible topoisomerase cleavage site (topo site). The formation of drug-stabilized cleavage complexes at the topo site and the subsequent repair product formation are monitored by Southern blotting. Using this assay, we analyze the protein requirements for recombinational repair of damage at the topo site and ask how these requirements compare to those for repair of endonuclease-generated DSBs.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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m-AMSA was provided by the Drug Synthesis and Chemistry Branch, National Cancer Institute, and diluted in DMSO. Restriction enzymes and T4 DNA ligase were obtained from New England Biolabs (Beverly, MA), Nytran nylon transfer membranes from Schleicher and Schuell (Keene, NH), random-primed labeling kits from Roche Molecular Biochemicals (Indianapolis), and [
-32P]dATP from New England Nuclear (Boston). Oligonucleotides were synthesized by the Duke University Cancer Center DNA Core Facility, and sequencing was performed by the Duke University Cancer Center DNA Analysis Facility. L-broth contained Bacto-Tryptone (10 g/liter), yeast extract (5 g/liter), and sodium chloride (10 g/liter). Ampicillin and tetracycline were obtained from Sigma (St. Louis) and used at concentrations of 25 µg/ml and 2 µg/ml, respectively, in plasmid-containing cultures.
Strains:
E. coli strain JGD1 is a derivative of KL16 (
-, e14-, relA1, spoT1, thi-1; ![]()
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1), K10-46 [as K10, with amB14 (gene 46)], K10-32 [as K10, with amA453 (gene 32)], K10-49 [as K10, with amE727 (gene 49)], K10-G269V [as K10, with G269V (gene 52)], and K10-S79am [as K10, with amS79 (gene 52)] (![]()
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Plasmids:
Plasmid pBS1 was constructed as follows. The plasmid pJG2 (![]()
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Plasmids pBS2, pBS3, pBS4, and pBS5 are all derivatives of pBS1. Plasmid pBS2 lacks a topo site at the XhoI restriction site. Plasmid pBS3 contains a mutated topo site at the XhoI site created by annealing the following oligonucleotides (bases varying from the pBS1 topo site are underlined): 5'-TCGAGCTCAAGCTAAAGCTATATAGCTTTATTCAAGGC-3' and 5'-TCGAGCCTTGAATAAAGCTATATAGCTTTAGCTTGAGC-3'. Plasmid pBS4 contains a I-TevI cleavage site (described in ![]()
Plasmid pAC1000 was constructed from pJGH914-01 as follows. Plasmid pJGH914-01 contains inverted repeats of 1500 bp total length, one interrupted by the topo site and the other by a 284-bp NaeI fragment. Primers were constructed to amplify a 1271-bp region that included the NaeI fragment and
500 bp of the inverted repeat on both sides of the NaeI fragment. One primer contained an AflIII site and the other a SalI site. The PCR fragment and the parental pJGH914-01 were digested with these enzymes and ligated together, resulting in a pJGH914-01 derivative with inverted repeats of
1000 bp total length (interrupted centrally by either the topo site or the 284-bp NaeI fragment). This plasmid was digested with EcoRI, and the resulting 1395-bp fragment containing the NaeI fragment and surrounding inverted repeat was inserted at the EcoRI site of pACYC184 to generate pAC1000.
Phage infections and DNA preparation:
Aliquots of frozen log-phase JGD1 cells harboring pAC1000 and the appropriate pBS plasmid were diluted 1:200 into L-broth containing ampicillin and tetracycline and grown with shaking at 37° to an OD560 of 0.5 (roughly 4 x 108 cells/ml). Phage were added at three plaque-forming units per cell and incubated for 4 min at 37° without shaking to allow phage adsorption. Cultures were incubated an additional 2 min at 37° with vigorous shaking prior to the addition of m-AMSA (in DMSO) at 5 µg/ml (unless otherwise indicated; controls received an equivalent volume of DMSO). Cultures were incubated at 37° with vigorous shaking for an additional 18 min, and 1-ml aliquots were then removed. Cells from each aliquot were collected by centrifugation and frozen in an ethanol/dry ice bath. Cell pellets were resuspended in 300 µl lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 10 mM EDTA, 100 mM NaCl, 0.2% SDS, 330 µg/ml proteinase K) and incubated for 2 hr at 55°. Total nucleic acids were extracted with phenol/chloroform/isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) and dialyzed against TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA) overnight at 4°.
Gel electrophoresis and Southern blotting:
Total nucleic acids (10 µl) were digested overnight at 37° with 40 units of AseI (double digests contained 20 units of HaeIII in addition). Digests were subjected to electrophoresis at 2 V/cm for 27 hr in a 1% agarose gel in 1x TBE (89 mM Tris, 89 mM boric acid, 2 mM EDTA) unless otherwise noted. Gels were treated for 20 min with 0.24 N HCl and then twice for 15 min with 0.4 M NaOH/0.6 M NaCl. Southern blotting was performed with Nytran membranes using procedures recommended by the manufacturer (Schleicher and Schuell). Probes were prepared from purified restriction fragments using the random-primed labeling kit (Roche Molecular Biochemicals; see Fig 1 for description of probes). Blots were visualized using a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA). When necessary, blots were stripped by boiling in 1% SDS three times for 15 min and checked for residual counts.
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| RESULTS |
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Assay to detect repair of topoisomerase-mediated DNA damage:
A two-plasmid assay was developed to analyze repair from one particular topoisomerase cleavage site. Plasmids pBS1 and pAC1000 share
1000 bp of homology (shaded boxes in Fig 1A), which allows damaged pBS1 to use pAC1000 as a template for homologous recombinational repair. The homologous region is interrupted centrally in both plasmids. Plasmid pBS1 has a 38-bp insert containing a strong m-AMSA-inducible topoisomerase cleavage site (topo site) while pAC1000 contains a 283-bp NaeI fragment at the corresponding location. Following T4 infection of E. coli harboring the two plasmids and subsequent addition of m-AMSA, topoisomerase cleavage complexes accumulated at the topo site (data not shown; also see below). In addition, plasmid pBS1 replicates following infection due to its cloned T4 origin of replication [ori(34)].
If the drug-stabilized cleavage complexes at the topo site cause DNA breaks requiring recombinational repair, the resulting repair products are expected to carry the 283-bp NaeI fragment in place of the topo site (when pAC1000 is used as repair template). Some repair events could be associated with a single crossover between the flanking regions of the two plasmids (the LC and RC products shown in Fig 1). Other repair events could lead to a reconstituted pBS1 plasmid with the 283-bp NaeI fragment replacing the topo site (the NC product in Fig 1; no crossover between flanking regions of the two plasmids). AseI digestion of these different repair products and the original plasmids would yield fragments of varying size that can be resolved by Southern hybridization (Fig 1C).
The replication status of the various restriction fragments can be determined since phage-replicated DNA contains glucosylated hydroxymethylcytosine residues. While AseI can cleave this modified DNA, other restriction enzymes such as HaeIII cannot. Because HaeIII cuts the plasmid DNA at many sites, it can be used to digest away any unmodified plasmid bands, leaving behind only modified, phage-replicated bands. In addition, the modified DNA migrates slightly more slowly than unmodified DNA during gel electrophoresis, giving it a characteristic shift.
Drug-stabilized cleavage complexes at the topo site stimulate recombinational repair:
The two-plasmid assay was first used to determine if the topo site on plasmid pBS1 stimulates recombinational repair in the presence of m-AMSA. T4 strain K10 was used to infect E. coli containing pAC1000 and either pBS1 or pBS2 (a control plasmid lacking the 38-bp topo site). At 6 min post-infection, each culture was split into two equal samples, one receiving m-AMSA (5 µg/ml). At 24 min, the infections were terminated and total DNA was isolated (control samples were isolated from uninfected cells, i.e., time zero). Following AseI digestion and Southern blotting, DNA samples were hybridized to the flanking probe, which detects the region of homology shared between pAC1000 and the pBS plasmids (Fig 1B).
Looking first at the nonrecombinant bands, the AseI fragments of pBS1 and pBS2 appear as doublets at the 24-min time point since they contain a T4 replication origin (Fig 2A, lanes 2, 3, 5, and 6, solid arrowheads). The upper band in the doublet is the modified (phage-replicated) pBS DNA containing glucosylated hydroxymethylcytosine residues, while the lower band consists of unmodified pBS DNA present prior to phage infection (since replication from the bacterial plasmid origin shuts off following phage infection; ![]()
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The recombinational repair products are best visualized using a probe for the 283-bp NaeI fragment of the pAC1000 plasmid (Fig 1B, NaeI probe). Fig 2B shows the same blot as in Fig 2A, but hybridized with the NaeI probe. In addition to detecting the nonrecombinant pAC1000 AseI fragment, the NaeI probe detects all the expected crossover and noncrossover repair products (listed in Fig 1C). Without drug treatment, noncrossover (NC) repair product is undetectable whether or not the pBS plasmid contains the topo site (Fig 2B, lanes 2 and 5). Drug treatment induces the formation of this repair product, and the induction is much stronger when the pBS plasmid carries the topo site (compare lanes 3 and 6 of Fig 2B). Quantitation of multiple experiments indicates that approximately threefold more drug-induced noncrossover repair product forms when the topo site is present (Table 1). Thus, the majority of the noncrossover repair product observed with the pBS1 plasmid depends on the cloned topo site, presumably reflecting repair of DNA damage from the drug-stabilized cleavage complexes at this site. The small amount of drug-induced noncrossover repair product observed in the absence of the topo site is presumably due to low-level cleavage complex formation at other weak sites along the pBS2 plasmid.
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Analysis of the crossover repair products (RC and LC) is complicated by significant drug-independent formation of these products (Fig 2B, lanes 2 and 5). This drug-independent signal requires the T4 origin of replication (see Fig 4) and is addressed in detail elsewhere (J. W. GEORGE, B. A. STOHR, D. J. TOMSO and K. N. KREUZER, unpublished results). Quantitation of multiple experiments nevertheless indicates that the topo site stimulates formation of crossover repair products just as it does noncrossover repair products (i.e., approximately threefold more drug-induced crossover repair products with the topo site present; Table 1). Because the effect of the topo site on recombinational repair is most readily apparent with the noncrossover product, we focus on this repair band in the figures that follow.
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Mutation of topo site reduces stimulatory effect on recombinational repair:
Previous mutational analysis of an m-AMSA-inducible topoisomerase cleavage site showed that particular sequence changes close to the sites of DNA cleavage could reduce or eliminate in vitro drug-stabilized cleavage complex formation (![]()
Drug-stabilized cleavage complex formation at the mutated topo site was dramatically reduced compared to the unaltered topo site (compare lanes 3 and 9 of Fig 2A, asterisk), but a weak cleavage product band was detected in an overexposure (data not shown). Drug-induced noncrossover repair product (NC) formation was much lower with the mutated topo site (pBS3) than with the unaltered topo site (pBS1; compare lanes 3 and 9 of Fig 2B) and was roughly equivalent to that with no topo site (pBS2; compare lanes 6 and 9 of Fig 2B). Quantitation of multiple experiments indicated that the mutated topo site had, at most, a weak stimulatory effect on drug-induced repair product formation (Table 1). This result provides additional evidence that drug-stabilized cleavage complex formation at the topo site stimulates recombinational repair with the pBS1 plasmid.
As an additional control, recombinational repair of endonuclease-generated double-strand breaks was analyzed using the two-plasmid repair assay (Fig 2A and Fig B, lanes 1012); those experiments are described in detail below.
Topoisomerase mutants alter recombinational repair from topo site:
If drug-stabilized cleavage complexes at the topo site are responsible for the stimulation of recombinational repair, certain mutations in the T4 type II topoisomerase should influence the level of drug-induced recombinational repair. One previously described T4 topoisomerase mutant is hypersensitive to a variety of topoisomerase inhibitors including m-AMSA (![]()
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Origin of replication is required for repair product formation:
Evidence has accumulated that DNA replication plays a role in converting reversible cleavage complexes into irreversible DNA breaks (see Introduction). To address this issue, we asked whether the T4 origin of replication on the pBS1 plasmid is required to observe recombinational repair from the topo site. We constructed pBS5, which is identical to pBS1 except that it lacks the T4 origin of replication. While pBS1 and pBS5 both have a plasmid replication origin, that origin is shut down upon T4 infection (![]()
As in the above experiments, drug-induced noncrossover repair product is readily observed with pBS1 (Fig 4B, lane 2, NC), but no such product is detected with pBS5 (Fig 4B, lane 4, NC'). Note that the pBS5 noncrossover repair band, if present, would run faster than the corresponding pBS1 repair band since it would lack the 170-bp T4 origin. The bracket labeled NC' in Fig 4B notes the expected position of noncrossover repair product in the pBS5 lanes. The absence of noncrossover repair products from pBS5 is consistent with DNA replication playing a role in the processing of topoisomerase-mediated DNA damage. However, this interpretation is weakened by the fact that more drug-stabilized cleavage complexes form on the modified pBS1 (Fig 4A, lane 2, asterisk) than on the unmodified pBS5 (Fig 4A, lane 4, double asterisk). This difference, which likely results from a preference for cleavage complex formation on modified DNA, could contribute to the lack of recombinational repair product formation in the absence of a T4 replication origin.
Repair of topoisomerase-mediated damage and endonuclease-generated DSBs requires the same recombinational repair proteins:
The protein requirements for repair of endonuclease-generated DSBs have been studied previously in bacteriophage T4 using a one-plasmid repair assay (![]()
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We asked whether recombinational repair of topoisomerase-mediated damage exhibits the same protein requirements as repair from I-TevI-generated DSBs. For this purpose, we constructed plasmid pBS4, which is identical to pBS1 except that it contains the I-TevI endonuclease recognition sequence in place of the topo site. Following T4 infection, I-TevI is expressed and cleaves pBS4 at the recognition sequence. The DSBs stimulate massive amounts of recombinational repair of pBS4 with pAC1000 serving as repair template, and the resulting crossover and noncrossover repair products are the same size as those seen with the topo site (Fig 2A and Fig B; compare lanes 11 and 12 to lanes 2 and 3). As expected, the accumulation of repair products occurs with or without m-AMSA. However, the level of repair product formation is somewhat lower in the presence of the drug for unknown reasons (Fig 2A and Fig B; compare lanes 11 and 12).
Repair product formation with both the topo site (pBS1) and the I-TevI site (pBS4) was dramatically reduced by mutations in uvsX or uvsY (Fig 5B, lanes 13 and 79; note that m-AMSA was added to all infections in this experiment). With the topo site, noncrossover repair product formation dropped
10-fold in the absence of either protein, compared to an
100-fold drop with the I-TevI site. Thus, a large majority of repair events in both cases required UvsX and UvsY, although repair independent of these two proteins was more prominent with the topo site. One concern with this type of genetic analysis is that the mutations in uvsX and uvsY could decrease recombinational repair through an indirect effect, for example, by decreasing topoisomerase expression. This seems unlikely, however, because formation of drug-stabilized cleavage complexes appears to be unaffected by the uvsX or uvsY mutations (Fig 5A, lanes 13, asterisks).
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Absence of gp46 completely abolished repair from both the topo site (pBS1) and the I-TevI site (pBS4; Fig 5B, lanes 4 and 10). The absence of gp46 also led to a dramatic increase of I-TevI cleavage product (Fig 5A, lane 10, asterisks). This increase has been previously documented and is believed to result from stabilization of the broken ends due to the absence of gp46 exonuclease activity (![]()
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Mutation of gene 32 also abolished recombinational repair from both the topo site (pBS1) and the I-TevI site (pBS4; Fig 5B, lanes 5 and 11). The loss of repair from the topo site occurred despite significant formation of drug-stabilized cleavage complexes on the unmodified pBS1 plasmid (Fig 5A, lane 5, bottom asterisk). The absence of repair induced by these cleavage complexes might result from gp32 playing a direct role in recombinational repair, but could also be due in part to the critical role of gp32 in DNA replication. As expected, no replication of either plasmid was observed in the infections lacking gp32 (Fig 5A, lane 5, top solid arrowhead).
An amber mutation in gene 49 decreased recombinational repair about fourfold with either the topo site or the I-TevI site, suggesting a role for this protein in the repair mechanism. The residual repair in the gene 49 mutant might reflect repair events that do not require the Holliday junction resolvase. Alternatively, some other protein(s) might resolve Holliday junctions in the absence of gp49, or a small amount of gp49 might be expressed despite the amber mutation.
The major conclusion is that repair of both topoisomerase-mediated damage and I-TevI breaks requires the same proteins, which argues for very similar repair mechanisms.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Previous genetic studies in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms have suggested that recombinational repair acts upon topoisomerase-mediated DNA damage, thereby limiting sensitivity to the type II topoisomerase inhibitors (see Introduction). Most of these studies have relied on cell or phage sensitivity as an experimental endpoint, thus limiting detailed analysis of the repair reaction. We present here a novel plasmid-based assay that allows physical analysis of the recombinational repair products from one particular topo site. The site specificity of the assay is demonstrated by the approximately threefold drop in drug-induced repair product formation when the topo site is absent or mutated (Fig 2). The involvement of topoisomerase is confirmed by the loss of signal in a topoisomerase null mutant and the appearance of signal at lower drug concentrations with an m-AMSA-hypersensitive topoisomerase mutant (Fig 3). To our knowledge, this is the first assay that detects repair from a particular topoisomerase recognition site.
Our results indicate that repair from the topo site requires the same recombinational repair proteins as repair of endonuclease-generated DSBs. Both types of repair are largely dependent on the UvsX and UvsY proteins and absolutely require gp46 and gp32. In addition, both types of repair are reduced severalfold by an amber mutation in gene 49. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that the drug-stabilized cleavage complexes at the topo site are processed into protein-free DSBs that are subsequently acted upon by the phage recombinational repair apparatus. Nonetheless, two results indicate that only a small fraction of detectable cleavage complexes is converted into DSBs. First, much less repair product appears to be formed from cleavage complexes than from endonuclease-generated DSBs (see Fig 2 and Fig 5). Second, we were unable to detect an increase in DSBs at the topo site in a gp46-deficient infection, where protein-free breaks are stabilized (Fig 5).
Assuming that drug-stabilized cleavage complexes are processed into protein-free DNA ends, the mechanism of this processing remains mysterious. The appearance of repair products in our system requires an active origin of replication on the plasmid with the topo site, consistent with the replication apparatus playing a role in cleavage complex processing. One possibility is that collision of a replication fork disrupts the drug-stabilized cleavage complex, generating at least one protein-free double-strand end (![]()
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Recent work has shown that drug-stabilized cleavage complexes can stall T4 replication forks in vivo (![]()
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However the DSBs are generated from drug-stabilized cleavage complexes, it is important to consider the mechanism by which these breaks are repaired. The requirement for the UvsX, UvsY, and gp32 proteins strongly suggests that single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) is generated during the repair process, because these proteins all play a role in the DNA strand exchange reaction. The gp46/47 protein complex is also required for repair and may be responsible for the generation of the ssDNA ends. This protein complex contains both helicase and nuclease motifs and is homologous to the eukaryotic proteins Rad50 and Mre11 (![]()
Numerous DSB repair models have been proposed, including the ![]()
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It is very likely that homologous recombination pathways also repair topoisomerase-mediated DNA lesions in mammalian systems. Recent studies have shown that DSBs in the mammalian genome are frequently repaired by homology-directed pathways, through both single-strand annealing and gene conversion mechanisms (![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Jim George and George Hong for preliminary work on this project and Dan Tomso for insightful discussions during assay development. This work was supported by research grant CA60836 from the National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute. B.A.S. was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health Medical Scientist Training Program Grant T32-GM07171-26.
Manuscript received November 8, 2000; Accepted for publication February 2, 2001.
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