parasites proliferate within circulating red blood cells and are responsible for the deadliest form of human malaria. These parasites are exposed to numerous intrinsic and external sources that could cause DNA damage; therefore, they have evolved efficient mechanisms to protect their genome integrity and allow them to proliferate under such conditions. In higher eukaryotes, double-strand breaks rapidly lead to phosphorylation of the core histone variant H2A.X, which marks the site of damaged DNA. We show that in that lacks the H2A.X variant, the canonical H2A (PfH2A) is phosphorylated on serine 121 upon exposure to sources of DNA damage. We further demonstrate that phosphorylated PfH2A is recruited to foci of damaged chromatin shortly after exposure to sources of damage, while the nonphosphorylated PfH2A remains spread throughout the nucleoplasm. In addition, we found that PfH2A phosphorylation is dynamic and that over time, as the parasite activates the repair machinery, this phosphorylation is removed. Finally, we demonstrate that these phosphorylation dynamics could be used to establish a novel and direct DNA repair assay in is the deadliest human parasite that causes malaria when it reaches the bloodstream and begins proliferating inside red blood cells, where the parasites are particularly prone to DNA damage. The molecular mechanisms that allow these pathogens to maintain their genome integrity under such conditions are also the driving force for acquiring genome plasticity that enables them to create antigenic variation and become resistant to essentially all available drugs. However, mechanisms of DNA damage response and repair have not been extensively studied for these parasites. The paper addresses our recent discovery that that lacks the histone variant H2A.X phosphorylates its canonical core histone PfH2A in response to exposure to DNA damage. The process of DNA repair in was mostly studied indirectly. Our findings enabled us to establish a direct DNA repair assay for similar to assays that are widely used in model organisms.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.01131-20 | DOI Listing |
Sci Adv
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Department of Radiation Oncology, Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390, USA.
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