Publications by authors named "Rebecca S Derbes"

Article Synopsis
  • The extinct L1PA13A, which was active around 60 million years ago, was reconstructed and tested, revealing lower retrotransposition activity in human HeLa cells compared to modern L1PA1 and older L1PA8.
  • The study indicates that while both proteins from L1 (ORF1p and ORF2p) impact retrotransposition efficiency, the cellular environment affects their performance, suggesting evolutionary adaptations of L1 elements to their host cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

DNA binding domains (DBDs) have been used with great success to impart targeting capabilities to a variety of proteins creating highly useful genomic tools. We evaluated the ability of five types of DBDs and strategies (AAV Rep proteins, Cre, TAL effectors, zinc finger proteins, and Cas9/gRNA system) to target the L1 ORF2 protein to drive retrotransposition of Alu inserts to specific sequences in the human genome. First, we find that the L1 ORF2 protein tolerates the addition of protein domains both at the amino- and carboxy-terminus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * The endonuclease complex ERCC1-XPF helps limit L1 retrotransposition and is mainly involved in the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway, which plays a critical role in DNA repair processes.
  • * Research shows that core proteins from the NER pathway, like XPD, XPA, and XPC, not only prevent L1 retrotransposition but also help avoid large duplications in the genome, suggesting they are important for maintaining genome integrity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Large quantities of dispersants were used as a method to disperse the roughly 210 million gallons of spilled crude oil that consumed the Gulf of Mexico. Little is known if the oil-dispersant and oil-dispersant mixtures on human airway BEAS-2B epithelial cells. Here we present the cytotoxic and genotoxic effects on the human lung cells BEAS-2B following exposure to and oil-dispersant mixtures on human airway BEAS-2B epithelial cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heavy metals such as cadmium, arsenic and nickel are classified as carcinogens. Although the precise mechanism of carcinogenesis is undefined, heavy metal exposure can contribute to genetic damage by inducing double strand breaks (DSBs) as well as inhibiting critical proteins from different DNA repair pathways. Here we take advantage of two previously published culture assay systems developed to address mechanistic aspects of DNA repair to evaluate the effects of heavy metal exposures on competing DNA repair outcomes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Non-long terminal repeat retroelements continue to impact the human genome through cis-activity of long interspersed element-1 (LINE-1 or L1) and trans-mobilization of Alu. Current activity is dominated by modern subfamilies of these elements, leaving behind an evolutionary graveyard of extinct Alu and L1 subfamilies. Because Alu is a nonautonomous element that relies on L1 to retrotranspose, there is the possibility that competition between these elements has driven selection and antagonistic coevolution between Alu and L1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Alu elements are trans-mobilized by the autonomous non-LTR retroelement, LINE-1 (L1). Alu-induced insertion mutagenesis contributes to about 0.1% human genetic disease and is responsible for the majority of the documented instances of human retroelement insertion-induced disease.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The vast majority of the 1.1 million Alu elements are retrotranspositionally inactive, where only a few loci referred to as 'source elements' can generate new Alu insertions. The first step in identifying the active Alu sources is to determine the loci transcribed by RNA polymerase III (pol III).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF