Publications by authors named "S J Admiraal"

Article Synopsis
  • Double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) are harmful to cells, and poor repair can lead to cancer, with DNA ligases III and IV traditionally recognized for fixing these breaks.
  • Recent research shows DNA ligase I (LIG1) can also help with DSB repair but is less efficient, especially with certain DNA structures compared to LIG3.
  • LIG3 outperforms LIG1 in terms of efficiency and binding affinity for DNA ends, suggesting it plays a critical role in nonhomologous end-joining repair mechanisms.
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AlkB is a bacterial Fe(II)- and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase that repairs a wide range of alkylated nucleobases in DNA and RNA as part of the adaptive response to exogenous nucleic acid-alkylating agents. Although there has been longstanding interest in the structure and specificity of AlkB and its homologs, difficulties in assaying their repair activities have limited our understanding of their substrate specificities and kinetic mechanisms. Here, we used quantitative kinetic approaches to determine the transient kinetics of recognition and repair of alkylated DNA by AlkB.

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The Mag1 and Tpa1 proteins from budding yeast () have both been reported to repair alkylation damage in DNA. Mag1 initiates the base excision repair pathway by removing alkylated bases from DNA, and Tpa1 has been proposed to directly repair alkylated bases as does the prototypical oxidative dealkylase AlkB from However, we found that repair of methyl methanesulfonate (MMS)-induced alkylation damage in DNA involves Mag1 but not Tpa1. We observed that yeast strains without are no more sensitive to MMS than WT yeast, whereas -deficient yeast are ∼500-fold more sensitive to MMS.

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Nicking of the DNA strand immediately upstream of an internal abasic (AP) site produces 5'-terminal abasic (dRp) DNA. Both the intact and the nicked abasic species are reactive intermediates along the DNA base excision repair (BER) pathway and can be derailed by side reactions. Aberrant accumulation of the 5'-terminal abasic intermediate has been proposed to lead to cell death, so we explored its reactivity and compared it to the reactivity of the better-characterized internal abasic intermediate.

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Hydrolysis of the N-glycosyl bond between a nucleobase and deoxyribose leaves an abasic site within duplex DNA. The abasic site can react with exocyclic amines of nucleobases on the complementary strand to form interstrand DNA-DNA cross-links (ICLs). We find that several enzymes from the base excision repair (BER) pathway protect an abasic site on one strand of a DNA duplex from cross-linking with an amine on the opposing strand.

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