AI Article Synopsis

  • Base excision repair is a crucial process that fixes damaged DNA by removing and replacing faulty bases, with AAG and APE1 playing key roles in this mechanism.
  • AAG specifically targets and excises damaged adenine bases, while APE1 acts on the resulting AP sites to continue the repair process.
  • The study found that AAG's activity can be slow, particularly with certain damaged bases, and this slow excision limits the formation of harmful AP sites, allowing for effective coordination with APE1 during DNA repair.

Article Abstract

The base excision repair pathway removes damaged DNA bases and resynthesizes DNA to replace the damage. Human alkyladenine DNA glycosylase (AAG) is one of several damage-specific DNA glycosylases that recognizes and excises damaged DNA bases. AAG removes primarily damaged adenine residues. Human AP endonuclease 1 (APE1) recognizes AP sites produced by DNA glycosylases and incises the phophodiester bond 5' to the damaged site. The repair process is completed by a DNA polymerase and DNA ligase. If not tightly coordinated, base excision repair could generate intermediates that are more deleterious to the cell than the initial DNA damage. The kinetics of AAG-catalyzed excision of two damaged bases, hypoxanthine and 1,N6-ethenoadenine, were measured in the presence and absence of APE1 to investigate the mechanism by which the base excision activity of AAG is coordinated with the AP incision activity of APE1. 1,N6-ethenoadenine is excised significantly slower than hypoxanthine and the rate of excision is not affected by APE1. The excision of hypoxanthine is inhibited to a small degree by accumulated product, and APE1 stimulates multiple turnovers by alleviating product inhibition. These results show that APE1 does not significantly affect the kinetics of base excision by AAG. It is likely that slow excision by AAG limits the rate of AP site formation in vivo such that AP sites are not created faster than can be processed by APE1.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dnarep.2006.09.001DOI Listing

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