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Publication
Journal: Neural Regeneration Research
September/9/2014
Abstract
Previous studies have indicated that electrical stimulation of the cerebellar fastigial nucleus in rats may reduce brain infarct size, increase the expression of Ku70 in cerebral ischemia/reperfusion area, and decrease the number of apoptotic neurons. However, the anti-apoptotic mechanism of Ku70 remains unclear. In this study, fastigial nucleus stimulation was given to rats 24, 48, and 72 hours before cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury. Results from the electrical stimulation group revealed that rats exhibited a reduction in brain infarct size, a significant increase in the expression of Ku70 in cerebral ischemia/reperfusion regions, and a decreased number of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL)-positive cells. Double immunofluorescence staining revealed no co-localization of Ku70 with TUNEL-positive cells. However, Ku70 partly co-localized with Bax protein in the cytoplasm of rats with cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury. These findings suggest an involvement of Ku70 with Bax in the cytoplasm of rats exposed to electrical stimulation of the cerebellar fastigial nucleus, and may thus provide an understanding into the anti-apoptotic activity of Ku70 in cerebral ischemia/reperfusion injury.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Proteome Research
December/26/2018
Abstract
The Ku heterodimer, composed of Ku70 and Ku80, is best characterized for its role in repairing double-stranded DNA breaks but is also known to participate in other regulatory processes. Despite our understanding of Ku protein interplay during DNA repair, the extent of Ku's protein interactions in other processes has never been fully determined. Using proximity-dependent biotin identification (BioID) and affinity purification coupled to mass spectrometry (AP-MS) with wild-type Ku70, we identified candidate proteins that interact with the Ku heterodimer in HEK293 cells, in the absence of exogenously induced DNA damage. BioID analysis identified approximately 250 nuclear proteins, appearing in at least two replicates, including known Ku-interacting factors such as MRE11A, WRN, and NCOA6. Meanwhile, AP-MS analysis identified approximately 50 candidate proteins. Of the novel protein interactors identified, many were involved in functions already suspected to involve Ku such as transcriptional regulation, DNA replication, and DNA repair, while several others suggest that Ku may be involved in additional functions such as RNA metabolism, chromatin-remodeling, and microtubule dynamics. Using a combination of BioID and AP-MS, this is the first report that comprehensively characterizes the Ku protein interaction landscape, revealing new cellular processes and protein complexes involving the Ku complex.
Publication
Journal: Investigational New Drugs
September/15/2011
Abstract
Natural products discovered from medicinal plants have played an important role in the treatment of cancer. In an effort to identify novel small molecules which can affect the proliferation of lymphoma cells, we tested methyl angolensate (MA), a plant derived tetranortriterpenoid, purified from the crude extract of the root callus of Soymida febrifuga commonly known as Indian red wood tree. We have tested MA for its cytotoxic properties on Burkitt's lymphoma cell lines, using various cellular assays. We observed that MA induces cytotoxicity in Daudi cells in a dose-dependent manner using trypan blue, MTT and LDH assays. We find that the treatment with MA led to activation of DNA double-strand break repair proteins including KU70 and KU80, suggesting the activation of nonhomologous DNA end joining pathway in surviving cells. Further, we find that methyl angolensate could induce apoptosis by cell cycle analysis, annexin V-FITC staining, DNA fragmentation and PARP cleavage. Besides, MA treatment led to reactive oxygen species generation and loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential. These results suggest the activation of mitochondrial pathway of apoptosis. Hence, we identify MA as a potential chemotherapeutic agent against Daudi cells.
Publication
Journal: International Journal of Molecular Medicine
March/8/2010
Abstract
A group of histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors has been shown to suppress the growth of a variety of human tumor lines in vitro and in vivo and they are among the most promising candidates for anti-cancer therapeutic agents. We investigated the ability of scriptaid, a novel HDAC inhibitor and trichostatin A (TSA) to enhance cell killing by radiation in radioresistant SQ-20B cells derived from human head and neck squamous carcinoma. SQ-20B cells were treated with scriptaid or TSA in combination with radiation. Cell survival was determined by a colony formation assay and protein levels were examined by Western blotting. DNA double strand breaks were measured by a gamma-H2AX focus assay. Radiosensitization was observed for SQ-20B cells incubated with scriptaid at 5 microM or TSA at 0.1 microM for 24 h. Radiosensitization by scriptaid was accompanied by a prolonged retention of gamma-H2AX foci, suggesting that the enhancement of radiation cell killing by scriptaid involved inhibition of DNA double strand break repair. In addition, treatment with scriptaid suppressed expression of Ku80, but not Ku70. Scriptaid may be a useful radiosensitizer in the treatment of radioresistant human carcinomas.
Publication
Journal: International Journal of Radiation Biology
March/2/2010
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To investigate the radiosensitising effect of Ku autoantigen 70 (Ku70) and Ku autoantigen 80 (Ku80) knockdown by lentivirus-mediated RNA interference (RNAi) in the MCF10A immortalised human mammary epithelial cell line.
METHODS
MCF10A cells were infected with lentiviral vectors for RNAi of Ku70. The Ku70-knockdown cell line (Ku70i) and a mock-infected control cell line (LVTHM) were used to perform radiation experiments. For the in vitro Micronucleus (MN) assay, both cell lines were irradiated with doses of 2 and 4 Gy (60)Co gamma-rays. For cell survival experiments, doses ranging between 0 and 8 Gy were used.
RESULTS
Western blot analysis showed that the Ku70 lentiviral vector was effective in silencing the expression of both Ku70 and Ku80. A significantly higher radiation-induced MN yield was obtained in the Ku70i cell line compared to the control LVTHM cell line. RNAi of Ku70 also resulted in a lower survival yield after irradiation compared to the control cell line. Analysis of cell death mechanisms showed that MCF10A cells (Ku70i and LVTHM) do not undergo apoptosis, but undergo post-irradiation cellular senescence.
CONCLUSIONS
RNAi of Ku70 resulted in increased chromosomal and cellular radiosensitivity in the MCF10A human mammary cell line after irradiation with (60)Co gamma-rays. These results further strengthen the role of the Ku protein in correct DNA double strand break (DSB) repair.
Publication
Journal: Molecular Cancer Research
January/2/2017
Abstract
The zinc finger transcription factor Krüppel-like factor 4 (KLF4) is frequently downregulated in colorectal cancer. Previous studies showed that KLF4 is a tumor suppressor in the intestinal tract and plays an important role in DNA damage-repair mechanisms. Here, the in vivo effects of Klf4 deletion were examined from the mouse intestinal epithelium (Klf4(ΔIS)) in a genetic or pharmacological setting of colonic tumorigenesis:Apc(Min/⁺) mutation or carcinogen treatment with azoxymethane (AOM), respectively.Klf4 (ΔIS)/Apc (Min/⁺) mice developed significantly more colonic adenomas with 100% penetrance as compared with Apc(Min/⁺) mice with intact Klf4 (Klf4(fl/fl)/Apc (Min/⁺)). The colonic epithelium of Klf4 (ΔIS)/Apc (Min/⁺)mice showed increased mTOR pathway activity, together with dysregulated epigenetic mechanism as indicated by altered expression of HDAC1 and p300. Colonic adenomas from both genotypes stained positive for γH2AX, indicating DNA double-strand breaks. InKlf4 (ΔIS)/Apc (Min/+) mice, this was associated with reduced nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) repair and homologous recombination repair (HRR) mechanisms as indicated by reduced Ku70 and Rad51 staining, respectively. In a separate model, following treatment with AOM, Klf4 (ΔIS) mice developed significantly more colonic tumors than Klf4 (fl/fl) mice, with more Klf4 (ΔIS) mice harboring K-Rasmutations than Klf4 (fl/fl)mice. Compared with AOM-treated Klf4 (fl/fl)mice, adenomas of treated Klf4 (ΔIS) mice had suppressed NHEJ and HRR mechanisms, as indicated by reduced Ku70 and Rad51 staining. This study highlights the important role of KLF4 in suppressing the development of colonic neoplasia under different tumor-promoting conditions.
CONCLUSIONS
The study demonstrates that KLF4 plays a significant role in the pathogenesis of colorectal neoplasia.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Hepatology
January/6/2009
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
We previously reported that hepatitis C virus (HCV) core protein up regulated transcription of apolipoprotein C-IV (ApoC-IV, 10.7-fold increase), a member of the apolipoprotein family implicated in liver steatosis. Here, we identified host transcription factors regulating the ApoC-IV gene expression.
METHODS
Transcriptional regulators were identified by DNA affinity purification and steatosis was detected by oil red O staining and triglyceride assay.
RESULTS
We defined a 163-bp ApoC-IV promoter as a core protein responsive element, and identified Ku antigen complex (Ku70 and Ku80) as well as nuclear receptors PPARgamma/RXRalpha as key regulators of ApoC-IV gene expression. Both Ku70 overexpression and PPARgamma agonist significantly increased ApoC-IV promoter activity; conversely, Ku70 silencing or mutation of PPARgamma binding site diminished the ApoC-IV promoter activity. Interestingly, transient transfection of ApoC-IV cDNA into a human hepatoma cell line was able to trigger moderate lipid accumulation. In agreement with this in vitro study, ApoC-IV transcript level was increased in HCV infected livers which correlated with triglyceride accumulation.
CONCLUSIONS
ApoC-IV overexpression may perturb lipid metabolism leading to lipid accumulation. HCV core protein may modulate ApoC-IV expression through Ku antigen and PPARgamma/RXRalpha complex.
Publication
Journal: Oncogene
October/28/2015
Abstract
The E2 ubiquitin conjugating enzyme Ubc13 and the E3 ubiquitin ligases Rad18 and Rnf8 promote homologous recombination (HR)-mediated double-strand break (DSB) repair by enhancing polymerization of the Rad51 recombinase at γ-ray-induced DSB sites. To analyze functional interactions between the three enzymes, we created RAD18(-/-), RNF8(-/-), RAD18(-/-)/RNF8(-/-) and UBC13(-/-)clones in chicken DT40 cells. To assess the capability of HR, we measured the cellular sensitivity to camptothecin (topoisomerase I poison) and olaparib (poly(ADP ribose)polymerase inhibitor) because these chemotherapeutic agents induce DSBs during DNA replication, which are repaired exclusively by HR. RAD18(-/-), RNF8(-/-) and RAD18(-/-)/RNF8(-/-) clones showed very similar levels of hypersensitivity, indicating that Rad18 and Rnf8 operate in the same pathway in the promotion of HR. Although these three mutants show less prominent defects in the formation of Rad51 foci than UBC13(-/-)cells, they are more sensitive to camptothecin and olaparib than UBC13(-/-)cells. Thus, Rad18 and Rnf8 promote HR-dependent repair in a manner distinct from Ubc13. Remarkably, deletion of Ku70, a protein essential for nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) significantly restored tolerance of RAD18(-/-) and RNF8(-/-) cells to camptothecin and olaparib without affecting Rad51 focus formation. Thus, in cellular tolerance to the chemotherapeutic agents, the two enzymes collaboratively promote DSB repair by HR by suppressing the toxic effect of NHEJ on HR rather than enhancing Rad51 focus formation. In contrast, following exposure to γ-rays, RAD18(-/-), RNF8(-/-), RAD18(-/-)/RNF8(-/-) and UBC13(-/-)cells showed close correlation between cellular survival and Rad51 focus formation at DSB sites. In summary, the current study reveals that Rad18 and Rnf8 facilitate HR by two distinct mechanisms: suppression of the toxic effect of NHEJ on HR during DNA replication and the promotion of Rad51 focus formation at radiotherapy-induced DSB sites.
Publication
Journal: Nucleic Acids Research
February/12/2014
Abstract
Exposure to genotoxic agents, such as ionizing radiation (IR), produces double-strand breaks, repaired predominantly in mammalian cells by non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ). Ku70 was identified as an interacting partner of a proteolytic Cyclin E (CycE) fragment, p18CycE. p18CycE endogenous generation during IR-induced apoptosis in leukemic cells and its stable expression in epithelial tumor cells sensitized to IR. γH2AX IR-induced foci (IRIFs) and comet assays indicated ineffective NHEJ DNA repair in p18CycE-expressing cells. DNA pull-down and chromatin recruitment assays revealed that retention of NHEJ factors to double-strand breaks, but not recruitment, was diminished. Similarly, IRIFs of phosphorylated T2609 and S2056-DNA-PKcs and its target S1778-53BP1 were greatly decreased in p18CycE-expressing cells. As a result, DNA-PKcs chromatin association was also increased. 53BP1 IRIFs were suppressed when p18CycE was generated in leukemic cells and in epithelial cells stably expressing p18CycE. Ataxia telangiectasia mutated was activated but not its 53BP1 and MDC1 targets. These data indicate a profound influence of p18CycE on NHEJ through its interference with DNA-PKcs conformation and/or dimerization, which is required for effective DNA repair, making the p18CycE-expressing cells more IR sensitive. These studies provide unique mechanistic insights into NHEJ misregulation in human tumor cells, in which defects in NHEJ core components are rare.
Publication
Journal: Gene
March/13/2003
Abstract
Ku antigen is an abundant nuclear protein with multiple functions that depend mainly on Ku's prolific and highly verstatile interactions with DNA. We have shown previously that the direct binding of Ku in vitro to negative regulatory element 1 (NRE1), a transcriptional regulatory element in the long terminal repeat of mouse mammary tumour virus, correlates with the regulation of viral transcription by Ku. In this study, we have sought to explore the interaction of Ku with NRE1 in vivo in yeast one-hybrid experiments. Unexpectedly, we observed that human Ku70 carrying a transcriptional activation domain from the yeast Gal4 protein induced transcription of yeast reporter genes pleiotrophically, independent of NRE1, promoter, reporter gene and chromosomal location. Ku80 with the same activation domain had no effect on transcription when expressed alone, but reconstituted activation when co-expressed with native human Ku70. The requirements for transcriptional activation by Ku-Gal4 activation domain proteins correlated with previous descriptions of the requirements for DNA sequence-independent DNA binding by Ku, but were distinct from determinants for DNA-end binding by a truncated Ku heterodimer determined recently by crystallography. These results suggest a preferential targeting of Ku to transcriptionally active chromatin that indicate a possible function for Ku within the RNA polymerase II holoenzyme.
Publication
Journal: Oncogene
May/12/1998
Abstract
The heterodimeric Ku protein, which comprises a 86 kDa (Ku86) amd a 70 kDa (Ku70) subunits, is an abundant nuclear DNA-binding protein which binds in vitro to DNA termini without sequence specificity. Ku is the DNA-targeting component of the large catalytic sub-unit of the DNA-dependent protein kinase complex (DNA-PK[CS]), that plays a critical role in mammalian double-strand break repair and lymphoid V(D)J recombination. By using electrophoretic mobility shift assays, we demonstrated that in addition to the major Ku x DNA complex usually detected in cell line extracts, a second complex with faster electrophoretic mobility was observed in normal peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) extracts. The presence of this faster migrating complex was restricted to B cells among the circulating lymphocyte population. Western blot analysis revealed that B cells express a variant form of the Ku86 protein with an apparent molecular weight of 69 kDa, and not the 86 kDa- full-length protein. Although the heterodimer Ku70/variant-Ku86 binds to DNA-ends, this altered form of the Ku heterodimer has a decreased ability to recruit the catalytic component of the complex, DNA-PK(CS), which contributes to an absence of detectable DNA-PK activity in B cells. These data provide a molecular basis for the increased sensitivity of B cells to ionizing radiation and identify a new mechanism of regulation of DNA-PK activity that operates in vivo.
Publication
Journal: Cancer Letters
April/11/2004
Abstract
The Ku heterodimer, which consists of Ku70 and Ku86 subunits, is a major sensor of DNA breaks. A truncated form of Ku86 lacking its C-terminus, termed Ku86 variant, has been detected in extracts from different human cells. Here we report that in human lymphocytes the Ku86 variant is not present in vivo but is generated in vitro upon cell lysis by a trypsin-like protease. The resulting Ku86 variant exists exclusively in complexes with Ku70, which possess strong affinity to DNA double strand termini. In different blood donors the levels of Ku86 variant correlated with the magnitude of radiation induced DNA breaks.
Publication
Journal: PLoS ONE
August/8/2013
Abstract
BACKGROUND
In prostate cancer the secreted form of clusterin (sCLU) has been described as an anti-apoptotic protein whose expression is increased after therapeutic intervention, whereas, the nuclear protein form nCLU was reported to have pro-apoptotic properties.
METHODS
In order to provide new therapeutic approaches targeting CLU, we developed a strategy based on exon skipping by using a lentiviral construct to preferentially induce the nuclear spliced form of the protein. The molecular construct was transduced in LNCaP cells for testing the modulation of sensitivity of the transduced cells to pro-apoptotic stress.
CONCLUSIONS
We showed an increase of nCLU/sCLU expression ratio in the prostate cancer cell line "LNCaP" after lentiviral vector-U7 nCLU transduction. Moreover, we showed a significant inhibition of cell proliferation in nCLU-U7 LNCaP cells after treatment with cisplatin and after exposure to ionizing radiation compared to control cells. Finally, we showed that nCLU-U7 LNCaP cells exposure to UV-C significantly reduced an increase of cell death compared to control. Finally, we showed that modulating nCLU expression had profound impact on Ku70/Bax interaction as well as Rad17 expression which could be a key mechanism in sensitizing cells to cell death. In conclusion, this is the first report showing that increasing of nCLU/sCLU expression ratio by using an "on demand alternative splicing" strategy successfully increased sensitivity to radiotherapy and chemotherapy of prostate cancer cells.
Publication
Journal: DNA Repair
October/5/2005
Abstract
It is vital that embryonic stem (ES) cells, which give rise to the diverse tissues of the mature organism, maintain genetic stability. To understand mechanisms for the prevention and causation of chromosomal instability, we have used spectral karyotyping (SKY) to analyse ES cells from wild-type and repair-gene knockout mice. We chose cells deficient in Ku70 (DNA end joining), Xrcc2 (gene conversion), Ercc1 (single-strand annealing) and Csb (transcription-coupled repair) to represent potentially-important DNA repair pathways, plus an Xpc-deficient line to examine loss of global nucleotide excision repair (NER). Spontaneous and radiation (X-ray or alpha-particle)-induced chromosome changes were assessed to measure the influence of different levels of damage severity on response. We show that most repair pathways (except for global NER) protect against chromosome changes induced by ionizing radiations, while only homology-dependent pathways protect against spontaneous chromosomal change in ES cells. However, for a given level of damage, the prevalence of different types of changes alters in the different repair-deficient lines. Thus, loss of Ercc1, Csb or Ku70 leads to increased fragment formation, but loss of Xrcc2 promotes exchanges between chromosomes. Strikingly, we found that loss of the Csb gene function specifically protects ES cells from complex exchanges, suggesting a role for transcription-associated events in complex exchange formation.
Publication
Journal: Cell Cycle
February/16/2011
Abstract
The Ku70/80 heterodimer is central to non-homologous end joining repair of DNA double-strand breaks and the Ku80 gene appears to be essential for human but not rodent cell survival. The Ku70/80 heterodimer is located at telomeres but its precise function in telomere maintenance is not known. In order to examine the role of Ku80 beyond DNA repair in more detail, we have taken a knockdown approach using a human fibroblast strain. Following targeted Ku80 knockdown, telomere defects are observed and the steady state levels of the TRF2 protein are reduced. Inhibitor studies indicate that this loss of TRF2 is mediated by the proteasome and degradation of TRF2 following Ku depletion appears to involve a decrease in chromatin binding of TRF2, suggesting that the Ku heterodimer enhances TRF2 chromatin association and that non-chromatin bound TRF2 is targeted to the proteasome.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Virology
September/25/2007
Abstract
The heterodimer Ku70/80 Ku is the DNA-binding component of the DNA-PK complex required for the nonhomologous end-joining pathway. It participates in numerous nuclear processes, including telomere and chromatin structure maintenance, replication, and transcription. Ku interacts with retroviral preintegration complexes and is thought to interfere with the retroviral replication cycle, in particular the formation of 2-long terminal repeat (LTR) viral DNA circles, viral DNA integration, and transcription. We describe here the effect of Ku80 on both provirus integration and the resulting transgene expression in cells transduced with retroviral vectors. We found that transgene expression was systematically higher in Ku80-deficient xrs6 cells than in Ku80-expressing CHO cells. This higher expression was observed irrespective of the presence of the viral LTR and was also not related to the nature of the promoter. Real-time PCR monitoring of the early viral replicative steps demonstrated that the absence of Ku80 does not affect the efficiency of transduction. We analyzed the transgene distributions localization in nucleus by applying a three-dimensional reconstruction model to two-dimensional fluorescence in situ hybridization images. This indicated that the presence of Ku80 resulted in a bias toward the transgenes being located at the periphery of the nucleus associated with their being repressed; in the absence of this factor the transgenes tend to be randomly distributed and actively expressed. Therefore, although not strictly required for retroviral integration, Ku may be involved in targeting retroviral elements to chromatin domains prone to gene silencing.
Publication
Journal: Immunogenetics
October/19/2000
Abstract
The gene for the catalytic subunit of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs) is responsible for severe combined immune deficiency (SCID) and its products associate with Ku70/Ku86 autoantigens, c-Abl, and other factors to exert its roles. Investigations to date suggest that DNA-PKcs comprises several regions which specifically interact with these known and other as yet unidentified factors. Nevertheless, the relationship between the structure and function of the DNA-PKcs molecule is poorly understood. Here we report cloning of the entire DNA-PKcs cDNA from chicken and Xenopus laevis. Comparative study of the DNA-PKcs polypeptides from four different vertebrates revealed at least three novel conserved regions in addition to the carboxyl-terminal region containing the phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase domain. We also demonstrated that the four vertebrates share the common genomic organization between a licensing factor, MCM4, and DNA-PKcs, both of which locate in a head-to-head manner within a few kilobase intervals. These data provide useful clues for the further genetic study of this huge multifunctional enzyme.
Publication
Journal: Radiation Research
March/18/2002
Abstract
An essential step in the repair of free radical-mediated DNA strand breaks is the removal of sugar fragments such as phosphoglycolate from the 3' termini. While the abasic endonuclease Ape1 can remove phosphoglycolate from single-strand breaks in double-stranded DNA, an enzyme capable of removing it from 3' overhangs of double-strand breaks has yet to be identified. We therefore tested DNase III, the predominant 3' ->> 5' exonuclease in mammalian cell extracts, for possible 3'-phosphoglycolate-removing activity. However, all 3'-phosphoglycolate substrates, as well as a 3'-phosphate substrate, were resistant to DNase III under conditions in which the analogous 3'-hydroxyl substrates were extensively degraded. The DNA end-binding protein Ku (an equimolar mixture of Ku70, now known as G22P1, and Ku86, now known as XRCC5) did not alter the resistance of the 3'-phosphoglycolate substrates, but the protein modulated the susceptibility of 3'-hydroxyl substrates, allowing DNase III to remove a 3' overhang but inhibiting digestion of the double-stranded portion of the substrate.
Publication
Journal: Anticancer Research
January/3/2013
Abstract
BACKGROUND
The DNA non-homologous end-joining repair gene XRCC6 (Ku70) plays a key role in both the DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair and cell cycle arrest. Defects in DSB repair capacity can lead to genomic instability. We hypothesized that a variant in the XRCC6 gene was associated with susceptibility to renal cell carcinoma (RCC).
METHODS
In a hospital-based case-control study of 92 patients with RCC and 580 cancer-free controls, the frequency matched by age and sex, the associations of XRCC6 promoter T-991C (rs5751129), promoter G-57C (rs2267437), promoter A-31G (rs132770), and intron 3 (rs132774) polymorphisms with RCC risk were investigated in a Taiwanese population. At the same time, 30 adjacent renal tissue samples were tested to estimate the XRCC6 mRNA expression by real-time quantitative reverse transcription.
RESULTS
Compared with the TT genotype, the TC genotype had a significantly increased risk of RCC [adjusted odds ratio=2.24, 95% confidence interval=1.25-4.08, p=0.0175]. The in vivo mRNA expression in renal tissues revealed a statistically significant lower XRCC6 mRNA expression in samples with TC/CC genotypes compared to those with the TT genotype (p=0.0039).
CONCLUSIONS
These evidence suggests that the XRCC6 T-991C genotype together with its mRNA expression are involved in the etiology of RCC and may be a marker for susceptibility to RCC in the population of Taiwan.
Publication
Journal: Transplantation
April/5/2006
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Because hepatocyte transplantation has been considered to be an attractive method to treat acute liver failure (ALF), efficient recovery of hepatocytes and maintenance of differentiated hepatocyte functions is of extreme importance. We here report the usefulness of an antiapoptotic pentapeptide V5, composed of Val-Pro-Met-Leu-Lys, in the monkey hepatocyte cultures.
METHODS
We evaluated albumin production, metabolizing abilities of ammonia, lidocaine, and diazepam of monkey hepatocytes cultured with V5. The protein expression of apoptosis-associated molecules was analyzed using power blot analysis. An unwoven cloth inoculated with V5-treated monkey hepatocytes was transplanted on the surface of the spleen of both SCID mice and Balb/c mice suffering from ALF induced by 90% hepatectomy.
RESULTS
When 100 microM V5 was utilized, ammonia-, lidocaine- and diazepam- metabolizing capacities and albumin production ability were significantly increased in V5-treated monkey hepatocytes. Such hepatocytes showed decreased Annexin V binding and increased the expression of anti-apoptotic and/or cytoprotective molecules, including Ku70, NF-kappaB, IKAP, hILP/XIAP, IkappaB, and CAS. Transplantation of the cloth containing the monkey hepatocytes significantly improved blood levels of glucose and ammonia and encephalopathy score and prolonged the survival of the mice with ALF.
CONCLUSIONS
The present work clearly demonstrates the usefulness of V5 for maintaining the functions of monkey hepatocytes in tissue culture.
Publication
Journal: Proteomics
December/5/2005
Abstract
A murine monoclonal antibody (mAb), CLD3 (IgG(1),kappa), was generated against hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Both immunofluorescence and immunohistochemical assays indicated the reactivity of CLD3 mAb localized at the nucleus and/or cytoplasm of tumorigenic HCC cell lines as well as in liver cancer tissues. By immunoprecipitation and using the matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry approach, the antigenic specificity of CLD3 was determined to be heterodimeric Ku70 and Ku80 autoantigen, which was confirmed by Western blotting.
Publication
Journal: International Journal of Medical Sciences
January/14/2014
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To study the status of oxidative stress and DNA damage repair in circulating blood leukocytes of heart failure patients supported by continuous flow left ventricular assist devices (LVADs).
METHODS
Ten HF patients implanted with LVAD as bridge to transplant or destination therapy were enrolled in the study and 10 age and sex matched volunteers were recruited as the study control. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) in blood leukocytes and superoxide dismutase (SOD) in erythrocytes were measured by flow cytometry/immunofluorescence microscopy and spectrophotometry, respectively. ELISA was used to measure oxidized low density lipoproteins (oxLDL) in plasma. Markers of DNA damage (γ-H2AX) and repairs (Mre11, DNA ligase IV, Ku70, and Ku80) were quantified in blood lymphocytes by immunocytochemistry.
RESULTS
Levels of ROS and oxLDL were significantly higher in HF patients with LVAD than baseline as well as the control group; moreover, SOD levels were decreased with increasing post-operative periods. All the changes indicated enhanced oxidative stress among LVAD recipients. Significantly higher γ-H2AX foci in lymphocytes confirmed DNA double strand breaks in LVAD recipients. γ-H2AX foci numbers in lymphocytes were positively correlated with the ROS and oxLDL and negatively with SOD levels (p<0.0001). Expressions of DNA ligase IV, Ku70 and Ku80 proteins were highest after one week and Mre11 protein after 3 months of LVAD transplantation; indicated abnormal DNA repair.
CONCLUSIONS
The study, for the first time shows that, continuous flow LVAD implanted HF patients not only exhibit elevated oxidative stress and DNA damage in blood leukocytes but also have abnormalities in DNA repair pathways.
Publication
Journal: Oncotarget
August/15/2016
Abstract
Ku70-dependent canonical nonhomologous end-joining (c-NHEJ) DNA repair system is fundamental to the genome maintenance and B-cell lineage. c-NHEJ is upregulated and error-prone in incurable forms of chronic lymphocytic leukemia which also displays telomere dysfunction, multiple chromosomal aberrations and the resistance to DNA damage-induced apoptosis. We identify in these cells a novel DNA damage inducible form of phospho-Ku70. In vitro in different cancer cell lines, Ku70 phosphorylation occurs in a heterodimer Ku70/Ku80 complex within minutes of genotoxic stress, necessitating its interaction with DNA damage-induced kinase pS2056-DNA-PKcs and/or pS1981-ATM. The mutagenic effects of phospho-Ku70 are documented by a defective S/G2 checkpoint, accelerated disappearance of γ-H2AX foci and kinetics of DNA repair resulting in an increased level of genotoxic stress-induced chromosomal aberrations. Together, these data unveil an involvement of phospho-Ku70 in fast but inaccurate DNA repair; a new paradigm linked to both the deregulation of c-NHEJ and the resistance of malignant cells.
Publication
Journal: Oncotarget
November/22/2017
Abstract
Surgical removal of colorectal cancer (CRC) liver metastases generates areas of tissue hypoxia. Hypoxia imposes a stem-like phenotype on residual tumor cells and promotes tumor recurrence. Moreover, in primary CRC, gene expression signatures reflecting hypoxia and a stem-like phenotype are highly expressed in the aggressive Consensus Molecular Subtype 4 (CMS4). Therapeutic strategies eliminating hypoxic stem-like cells may limit recurrence following resection of primary tumors or metastases. Here we show that expression of DNA repair genes is strongly suppressed in CMS4 and inversely correlated with hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF1α) and HIF-2α co-expression signatures. Tumors with high expression of HIF signatures and low expression of repair proteins showed the worst survival. In human tumors, expression of the repair proteins RAD51, KU70 and RIF1 was strongly suppressed in hypoxic peri-necrotic tumor areas. Experimentally induced hypoxia in patient derived colonospheres in vitro or in vivo (through vascular clamping) was sufficient to downregulate repair protein expression and caused DNA damage. Hypoxia-induced DNA damage was prevented by expressing the hydroperoxide-scavenging enzyme glutathione peroxidase-2 (GPx2), indicating that reactive oxygen species mediate hypoxia-induced DNA damage. Finally, the hypoxia-activated prodrug Tirapazamine greatly augmented DNA damage and reduced the fraction of stem-like (Aldefluorbright) tumor cells in vitro, and in vivo following vascular clamping. We conclude that decreased expression of DNA repair proteins and increased DNA damage in hypoxic tumor areas may be therapeutically exploited with hypoxia-activated prodrugs, and that such drugs reduce the fraction of Aldefluorbright (stem-like) tumor cells.
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