Nucleic Acids Research, 2003, Vol. 31, No. 20 5897-5906
© 2003 Oxford University Press
Effects of genomic context and chromatin structure on transcription-coupled and global genomic repair in mammalian cells
Zhaohui Feng1,
Wenwei Hu1,
Lawrence A. Chasin2 and
Moon-shong Tang*,1,3,4
1 Department of Environmental Medicine,
3 Department of Medicine and
4 Department of Pathology, New York University School of Medicine, Tuxedo, NY 10987, USA and
2 Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA
*To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +1 845 731 3585; Fax: +1 845 351 2385; Email: tang{at}env.med.nyu.edu
The authors wish it to be known that, in their opinion, the first two authors should be regarded as joint First Authors
Received July 14, 2003; Revised August 22, 2003; Accepted September 3, 2003
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ABSTRACT
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It has been long recognized that in mammalian cells, DNA damage
is preferentially repaired in the transcribed strand of transcriptionally
active genes. However, recently, we found that in Chinese hamster
ovary (CHO) cells, UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers
(CPDs) are preferentially repaired in both the transcribed and
the non-transcribed strand of exon 1 of the dihydrofolate reductase
(
DHFR) gene. We mapped CPD repair at the nucleotide level in
the transcriptionally active
DHFR gene and the adjacent upstream
OST gene, both of which have been translocated to two chromosomal
positions that differ from their normal endogeneous positions.
This allowed us to study the role of transcription, genomic
context and chromatin structure on repair. We found that CPD
repair in the transcribed strand is the same for endogenous
and translocated
DHFR genes, and the order of repair efficiency
is exon 1 > exon 2 > exon 5. However, unlike the endogenous
DHFR gene, efficient repair of CPDs in the non-transcribed strand
of exon 1 is not observed in the translocated
DHFR gene. CPDs
are efficiently repaired in the transcribed strand in endogenous
and translocated
OST genes, which indicates that efficient repair
in exon 1 of the non-transcribed strand of the endogenous
DHFR gene is not due to the extension of transcription-coupled repair
of the
OST gene. Using micrococcal nuclease digestion, we probed
the chromatin structure in the
DHFR gene and found that chromatin
structure in the exon 1 region of endogenous
DHFR is much more
open than at translocated loci. These results suggest that while
transcription-coupled repair is transcription dependent, global
genomic repair is greatly affected by chromatin structure.
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INTRODUCTION
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Nucleotide excision repair (NER) is a versatile repair system
that repairs a wide range of bulky DNA lesions, including UV
light-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) (
1
7).
Two distinct NER subpathwaystranscription-coupled repair
(TCR) and global genomic repair (GGR)have been found
in mammalian cells (
3
8). It is generally believed that
the TCR pathway is responsible for the repair of DNA damage
in the transcribed (T) strand of transcriptionally active genes,
and that the GGR pathway is responsible for the repair of DNA
damage occurring in locations other than the T strand of transcriptionally
active genes in the genome. In general, TCR is more efficient
than GGR. It has been found that human cells are proficient
in both TCR and GGR of CPDs, while rodent cells lack GGR of
CPDs (
9).
The basic enzymology of NER in mammalian cells has been well determined in vitro using naked DNA as substrates; more than 30 proteins are involved in NER in mammalian cells (1013). However, the molecular mechanism of NER on its natural substrate, chromatin, remains largely unknown, especially the mechanism of TCR in mammalian cells. Increasing evidence suggests that NER in mammalian cells is much more complex than our current understanding of TCR and GGR would indicate (1419). Recently, we found that in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) AT3-2 cells, CPDs in the T strand of the DHFR gene are efficiently repaired and CPDs in the non-transcribed (NT) strand of the first exon of the DHFR gene are also efficiently repaired. In contrast, CPDs in exons 2 and 5 of the NT strand of the DHFR gene are poorly repaired (19). These results raise the possibility that the efficient repair in the first exon of the NT strand of the endogenous DHFR gene may result from two mechanisms. The first mechanism is the extension of TCR from the OST gene (20,21) to the DHFR gene. The OST gene is located immediately 5' of the DHFR gene, shares the same promoter region with the DHFR gene and is transcribed in the direction opposite from the DHFR gene (20,21) (Fig. 1). The second possible mechanism is that the genomic context and/or chromatin structure of exon 1 is different from that found in exons 2 and 5. To test these possibilities, we mapped the CPD repair at nucleotide resolution in the DHFR and OST genes in three CHO cell lines, AT3-2, C26 and C38, using the T4 endonuclease V (T4 endo V) incision method in combination with ligation-mediated PCR (LMPCR) (18,19). We also probed the chromatin structure in the DHFR gene by determining the kinetics of micrococcal nuclease (MN) digestion. The DHFR and OST genes are located in different genomic contexts in these three cell lines: the AT3-2 cells contain DHFR and OST genes located in their normal endogenous positions, while in the C26 and C38 cells, the entire endogenous DHFR gene and at least 10 kb of the 5' portion of the OST genes are deleted, and a fragment containing a single copy of the intact DHFR gene and 8 kb of its upstream region containing the OST gene has been introduced into different positions of the chromosome in these two cell lines (22). Since the DHFR genes in C26 and C38 are located at chromosome positions differing from the endogenous DHFR gene position in AT3-2 cells but are still transcriptionally active, these cells provide us with tools for studying the effects of genomic context, transcription and chromatin structure on TCR and GGR in this gene.

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Figure 1. Map of the endogenous DHFR and OST gene domains in CHO cells. The DHFR and OST genes share a common promoter region and are transcribed (arrow indicates the transcription direction) divergently from this common promoter region.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Cell lines and culture conditions
AT3-2 cells contain diploid
DHFR loci, and both loci are transcriptionally
active. Both C26 and C38 cells contain a single copy of a transcriptionally
active
DHFR gene; they were constructed by transfection of CHO-DG44,
a double deletion (>115 kb) mutant lacking both copies of
the entire
DHFR gene and at least 10 kb of the 5' portion of
the
OST gene, with a cosmid containing a 41 kb DNA fragment
from Chinese hamster genomic DNA containing the intact
DHFR gene and flanking sequences (

8 kb upstream containing the
OST gene and 7 kb downstream) (
22). As determined by fluorescence
in situ hybridization, the chromosomal position of integration
differed from the endogenous
DHFR locus (
22) and the site of
integration was also different in these two transfectants. Northern
blot and RTPCR methods were used to confirm that the
DHFR gene in these three cell lines is transcriptionally active.
Cells were grown in

-minimum Eagles medium supplemented
with 10% fetal calf serum.
UV irradiation and genomic DNA isolation
For UV irradiation, AT3-2, C26 and C38 cells were grown to 5070% confluence in 150 mm dishes. Prior to UV irradiation, the culture medium was removed, the cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (68 mM NaCl, 1.94 mM KCl, 1.07 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.4) and the cells were then UV irradiated at a fluence rate of 1 J/m2/s for 15 s using GE15118 germicidal lamps (predominant emission 254 nm) as the UV source. After irradiation, the cells were incubated in fresh medium containing 10 µM 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine and 1 µM 5-fluorodeoxyuridine for various periods of time to allow DNA repair for repair kinetic analysis. After incubation, cells were lysed with lysing buffer (0.5% SDS, 10 mM Tris, pH 7.8, 10 mM EDTA, 10 mM NaCl, 100 µg/ml proteinase K) at room temperature for 1 h. Protein was removed by repeated phenol extractions followed by diethyl ether extractions. DNA was then ethanol precipitated and resuspended in TE buffer (10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA). RNA was removed by treatment with RNase A (50 µg/ml) for 1 h followed by repeated phenol and diethyl ether extractions. DNA was then ethanol precipitated and resuspended in TE buffer (pH 7.5). Replicated and non-replicated DNA were separated by CsCl gradient centrifugation in a Ti 50 rotor (3.7 x 104 r.p.m. for 72 h at 21°C). Only the unreplicated DNA was used for repair kinetics analysis (14,15,19).
Cleavage of CPDs with T4 endo V
A known quantity of purified genomic DNA (10 µg) was treated with T4 endo V (protein:DNA molar ratio 6:1, assuming the average DNA length was 14 kb) in a solution of 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, and 0.5 mM EDTA at 37°C for 60 min to cleave CPDs. Escherichia coli photolyase (0.5 µg/µg DNA) was then added and the mixtures were irradiated with 366 nm UV light (Sylvania 15 watt F15T8) for 60 min at room temperature in the presence of 10 mM dithiothreitol for photoreactivation. The reactions were stopped by repeated phenol and diethyl ether extractions. The resultant genomic DNA was then precipitated by ethanol, resuspended in TE buffer (pH 7.5) and subjected to LMPCR (14,15,19).
Mapping the repair of CPDs at the nucleotide level with LMPCR
To investigate the repair of CPDs in the DHFR and OST genes, a known quantity (1 µg) of T4 endo V-treated genomic DNA was subjected to LMPCR to map the distribution of CPDs along exons 1, 2 and 5 of the DHFR gene and the T strand of exon 1 in the OST gene. Control genomic DNA was subjected to MaxamGilbert sequencing (23) followed by LMPCR, in order to serve as a sequencing ladder. The LMPCR method was the same as previously described (14,15,18,19). The oligonucleotide primers (Midland Certified Reagent Co., Midland, TX) used for LMPCR analysis of exons 1, 2 and 5 of the DHFR gene were the same as previously described (19), and the primers used for LMPCR analysis of the T strand of exon 1 in the OST gene are shown in Table 1. Oligonucleotide primer 1 was used in the first primer extension step of LMPCR, primer 2 was the PCR primer, and primer 3 was used to make the single-stranded hybridization probe. The template used for hybridization probe synthesis was prepared by PCR amplification from CHO genomic DNA with primers 3 and 4. The resultant LMPCR products were separated by electrophoresis in 8% denaturing polyacrylamide gels and electro-transferred to GeneScreen nylon membranes (NEN, Boston, MA). Blots were hybridized with 32P-labeled DNA probes specific for exons 1, 2 or 5 of the DHFR gene and exon 1 of the OST gene in hybridization buffer (0.25 M Na2HPO4, pH 7.2, 1 mM EDTA, 7% SDS, 1% bovine serum albumin) at 60°C for 12 h. The membranes were then exposed to a Cyclone Storage Phosphor screen (Packard, Meriden, CT), and the intensities of T4 endo V incision bands were quantified with the Cyclone Storage Phosphor System (Packard). Approximately 20 000 d.p.m. of 32P-labeled linearized pBR322 plasmid DNA was added to each genomic DNA sample at the beginning of the LMPCR as an internal standard to monitor sample recovery. After LMPCR, equivalent counts of 32P, as measured by a liquid scintillation counter (LKB-Wallac, Turku, Finland) and representing equivalent amounts of sample DNA, were loaded into each lane of the sequencing gel to separate DNA fragments of different sizes.
Isolation of nuclei and digestion of chromatin by micrococcal nuclease
Methods for isolation of nuclei and subsequent MN digestion
were the same as described previously (
19,
24). Briefly, AT3-2,
C26 and C38 cells were harvested and nuclei were immediately
isolated. The freshly isolated nuclei (1
x 10
7) of each cell
line were immediately digested with MN (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech,
Piscataway, NJ) (1 U) in 100 µl of digestion buffer (100
mM Tris, pH 8.0, 50 mM NaCl, 3 mM MgCl
2, 1 mM CaCl
2) for 1,
2, 5 or 10 min at 37°C. The digestion was stopped by adding
an equal volume of stop solution (200 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 200 mM
NaCl, 20 mM EDTA, 2% SDS, 200 µg/ml proteinase K). The
control was an undigested, freshly lysed sample of nuclei. Genomic
DNA was purified as described above and then separated by electrophoresis
in 1.5% agarose gels. After staining with ethidium bromide,
the separated DNA was transferred to nylon membranes and hybridized
with a
32P-labeled probe specific for
DHFR exon 1. After de-probing,
the membranes were further hybridized with a
32P-labeled probe
specific for
DHFR exon 2.
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RESULTS
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CPD repair in the transcribed strand of the DHFR gene in different genomic contexts is the same
The repair of CPDs was mapped at the sequence level using the
T4 endo V incision method in combination with LMPCR. CPD repair
in the T strand of the
DHFR gene in these three cell lines is
shown in Figures
2 and
3. The kinetics of CPD repair in the
T strand of exons 1, 2 and 5 in the translocated
DHFR gene in
C26 and C38 cells are very similar, if not identical, to the
kinetics of repair in the endogenous
DHFR gene in AT3-2 cells.
The initial repair rate of CPDs along the T strand of the translocated
DHFR genes showed a 5' to 3' polarity effect similar to that
observed in the endogenous
DHFR gene in AT3-2 cells: the initial
repair rate was faster in exon 1 than in exon 2, and much faster
in exons 1 and 2 than in exon 5. In addition, there were no
significant differences in the initial repair rates along the
T strand between these three cell lines. The time required for
50% CPD removal (
T1/2) in exons 1, 2 and 5 of the
DHFR gene
in these three cell lines was

4, 6 and 12 h, respectively. However,
24 h post-irradiation, the CPDs were almost completely removed
in these three exons of the
DHFR gene in all three cell lines.



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Figure 2. The time course of CPD repair in the transcribed strand of exon 1 (A), exon 2 (B) and exon 5 (C) of the DHFR gene in CHO AT3-2, C26, and C38 cells. Cultured cells were UV irradiated (15 J/m2) and then incubated for various periods of time. Genomic DNA was isolated, treated with T4 endo V followed by photoreactivation, and then subjected to LMPCR. The LMPCR products were separated by electrophoresis in 8% denaturing polyacrylamide gels, transferred to nylon membranes, and hybridized with 32P-labeled probes specific for the transcribed strand of DHFR exons 1, 2 or 5. A + G and T + C represent MaxamGilbert sequencing reactions. Sequences of contiguous pyrimidines with the potential to form CPDs are indicated on the left, and T4 endo V incision sites are indicated on the right (bracketed). Lanes 47 show the relative frequency of T4 endo V cutting at dipyrimidine sites along each sequence at different post-UV repair time points (0, 4, 12 and 24 h). Lane 3 (Con) represents DNA isolated from unirradiated control cells and treated with T4 endo V. Very similar results were obtained from three independent experiments.
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Figure 3. The kinetics of CPD repair in the transcribed strand of the DHFR gene in AT3-2, C26 and C38 cells. The relative amount of CPD formed at the dipyrimidine sites (bracketed) along the T strand of exons 1 (1T), 2 (2T) and 5 (5T) of the DHFR gene for each time point shown in Figure 2 was quantified with a Cyclone Storage Phosphor System. The percentage of CPDs remaining in the T strand of each exon was plotted as a function of repair time. The results represent three independent experiments.
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CPD repair in the non-transcribed strand of the DHFR gene in different genomic contexts is not the same
The efficient CPD repair in the NT strand of exon 1 in the endogenous
DHFR gene in AT3-2 cells could be due to the DNA sequence effects;
it is possible that the sequence of exon 1 of
DHFR may intrinsically
allow more efficient CPD repair. It is also possible that the
same mechanism facilitating efficient repair in the T strand
of exon 1, such as the transcription process of the
DHFR gene,
may also facilitate efficient repair in the NT strand. In either
case, our findings that CPD repair in the T strand is the same
in translocated and endogenous
DHFR genes led us to expect that
CPD repair in the NT strand of exons 1, 2 and 5 of the translocated
DHFR gene in C26 and C38 cells should be the same as that observed
in the endogenous
DHFR gene in AT3-2 cells. To test this possibility,
we mapped the CPD repair in the NT strand of exons 1, 2 and
5 of the translocated and endogenous
DHFR genes in these three
cell lines. The results in Figures
4 and
5 show that efficient
repair was not observed in the NT strand of exon 1 of the translocated
DHFR gene in either transfectant cell line. CPDs along the NT
strand were poorly repaired in exon 1 as well as in exons 2
and 5 in the translocated
DHFR genes, and >90% of CPDs remained
unrepaired 24 h after UV irradiation. In contrast, CPDs along
the NT strand of exon 1 in the endogenous
DHFR gene were efficiently
repaired and were almost completely removed 24 h after UV irradiation.
The CPD repair in the NT strand of exons 2 and 5 was the same
in both the endogenous and translocated
DHFR genes. These results
exclude the possibility that DNA sequence causes efficient CPD
repair in the NT strand of exon 1 and strongly suggest that
the mechanism facilitating the efficient CPD repair in the T
strand of exon 1 in the
DHFR gene in different genomic contexts
differs from the mechanism facilitating the efficient repair
in the NT strand of the endogenous
DHFR gene. Since the
DHFR genes in these three cell lines are all transcriptionally active,
these results also exclude the possibility that the efficient
repair in the NT strand of exon 1 in the endogenous
DHFR gene
results from the transcription process of the
DHFR gene.

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Figure 5. The kinetics of CPD repair in the non-transcribed strand of the DHFR gene in AT3-2, C26 and C38 cells. The relative amount of CPD formed at the dipyrimidine sites (bracketed) along the non-transcribed strand of exons 1 (1NT), 2 (2NT) and 5 (5NT) of the DHFR gene for each time point shown in Figure 4 was quantified with a Cyclone Storage Phosphor System. The percentage of CPD remaining in the non-transcribed strand of each exon was plotted as a function of repair time. The results represent three independent experiments.
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Genomic context does not affect TCR in the OST gene
It has been reported that in some transcriptionally active gene
domains, such as the
p53 gene in human cells and the
MFA2 gene
in yeast cells, TCR appears to extend beyond the transcription
start and termination sites of these active genes, i.e. the
genomic regions affected by TCR are larger than the actual transcription
unit (
25
27). It is known that at the endogenous
DHFR gene locus in CHO cells, there is an unidentified gene, the
OST gene (also named
Rep3), located immediately 5' upstream
of the
DHFR gene, that shares the same promoter region with
the
DHFR gene (
20,
21). It encodes a homolog of the mismatch
repair protein MSH3 in human cells (
28). The
OST gene is transcribed
in the direction opposite to that of the
DHFR gene; the DNA
strand used as the NT strand of the
DHFR gene is the T strand
of the
OST gene (Fig.
1) (
20,
21,
29). It has been shown that
in the
OST gene, CPDs are preferentially repaired in the T strand
and poorly repaired in the NT strand (
30). These findings raise
the possibility that the preferential repair of CPDs in the
NT strand of exon 1 in the endogenous
DHFR gene in AT3-2 cells
comes from the extension of TCR in the T strand of the
OST gene.
If this is the case, the disappearance of the preferential repair
of CPDs in exon 1 of the NT strand in the translocated
DHFR gene in C26 and C38 cells should be accompanied by the disappearance
of TCR from the T strand of the
OST gene, which could be caused
by the translocation of the fragment containing the intact
DHFR gene and

8 kb of the
OST gene 5' end, including the promoter
region. To test this possibility, CPD repair in exon 1 of the
OST gene was mapped at the nucleotide level in the AT3-2, C26
and C38 cell lines. The results in Figure
6 show that in both
endogenous and translocated
OST genes, the CPDs in the T strand
of exon 1 are efficiently repaired, and CPDs are almost completely
removed 12 h after UV irradiation. Furthermore, the repair efficiency
of CPDs in the T strand of the
OST gene in these three cell
lines is very similar. These results exclude the possibility
that the efficient repair of CPDs in the NT strand of exon 1
of the endogenous
DHFR gene in AT3-2 cells comes from the extension
of TCR from the upstream
OST gene.


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Figure 6. The time course of CPD repair in the transcribed strand of exon 1 of the OST gene in AT3-2, C26 and C38 cells. Cultured cells were UV irradiated (15 J/m2) and then incubated for various periods of time. Genomic DNA was isolated, treated with T4 endo V followed by photoreactivation, and then subjected to LMPCR. (A) Typical autoradiographs. A + G and T + C represent MaxamGilbert sequencing reactions. Sequences of contiguous pyrimidines with the potential to form CPDs are indicated on the left, and T4 endo V incision sites are indicated on the right (bracketed). Lanes 47 show the relative frequency of T4 endo V cutting at dipyrimidine sites along each sequence at different post-UV repair time points (0, 4, 12 and 24 h). Lane 3 (Con) represents DNA isolated from unirradiated control cells and treated with T4 endo V. Very similar results were obtained from three independent experiments. (B) The kinetics of CPD repair in the transcribed strand of exon 1 of the OST gene. The relative amount of CPD formed at the dipyrimidine sites (bracketed) along the transcribed strand of exons 1 of the OST gene for each time point shown in (A) was quantified with a Cyclone Storage Phosphor System. The percentage of CPD remaining in the transcribed strand was plotted as a function of repair time. The results represent three independent experiments.
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The kinetics of MN digestion in the exon 1 region are slower in the translocated DHFR genes than in the endogenous DHFR gene
It is known that packaging of eukaryotic DNA into chromatin
affects all aspects of DNA processing, including DNA repair,
because it modulates access of proteins to DNA (
31
33).
Several recent studies have demonstrated that nucleosomal structure
can inhibit repair of CPDs and <64> photoproducts
in
in vitro NER assays using mononucleosome or dinucleosome
systems, suggesting that the assembly of nucleosomes may restrict
the access of DNA repair proteins to the damaged DNA bases (
34
36).
We previously found that the exon 1 region of the endogenous
DHFR gene is more sensitive to MN digestion than the exon 2
and 5 regions, which indicates that the exon 1 region has a
more open chromatin structure than the exon 2 and 5 regions
(
19). These results raise the possibility that the more open
chromatin structure in exon 1 may contribute to the preferential
CPD repair in the NT strand of exon 1 in the endogenous
DHFR gene in AT3-2 cells. If this is the case, then we would expect
the chromatin structure of exon 1 in the translocated
DHFR gene
to be different from that found in exon 1 of the endogenous
DHFR gene, since we have found that CPD repair in the NT strand
of exon 1 is much more efficient in the endogenous than in the
translocated
DHFR gene. To test this possibility, we probed
the chromatin structure of exons 1 and 2 in both the endogenous
and translocated
DHFR genes by determining their sensitivity
to MN digestion. Nuclei were isolated from AT3-2, C26 and C38
cells, and subjected to digestion with MN for different time
periods. The results in Figure
7 show that the chromatin structure
of the exon 1 region of the endogenous
DHFR gene in AT3-2 cells
was much more sensitive to MN digestion than in the translocated
DHFR gene in C26 and C38 cells. After 3 min of MN digestion,
a significant amount of the endogenous
DHFR gene exon 1 was
in tri-, di- and mononucleosome structures. In contrast, most
of exon 1 in the translocated
DHFR genes remained in trinucleosome
and higher nucleosome structures. After 5 min of MN digestion,
there were more di- and mononucleosomes in exon 1 of the endogenous
DHFR gene than that in exon 1 of the translocated
DHFR genes.
However, the kinetics of MN digestion for exon 2 in the endogenous
and translocated
DHFR genes are very similar if not identical.
These results indicate that the exon 1 region of the endogenous
DHFR gene in AT3-2 cells has a much more open chromatin structure
than that of the translocated
DHFR genes in C26 and C38, which
strongly suggests that the more efficient repair of CPDs in
the NT strand of the exon 1 region of the endogenous
DHFR gene
is due to its more open chromatin structure.

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Figure 7. The MN digestion sensitivity of exons 1 and 2 of the DHFR gene in AT3-2, C26 and C38 cells. Nuclei were isolated from the three CHO cell lines and digested with MN (1 U/100 µl) for different times (0, 1, 3, 5 and 10 min). Genomic DNA was isolated, separated by electrophoresis in a 1.5% agarose gel, stained with ethidium bromide (A) and then transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane and hybridized with 32P-labeled probes specific for exon 1 (B) or exon 2 (C) of the DHFR gene.
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DISCUSSION
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It is generally accepted that NER consists of two pathways:
TCR and GGR. While the TCR pathway repairs DNA damage in the
T strand of actively transcribed genes, the GGR pathway repairs
DNA damage in the NT strand of actively transcribed genes and
non-coding DNA (
3
8). Most of our knowledge about TCR
and GGR is derived from the results of mapping CPD repair in
defined regions of the
DHFR gene in rodent and human cells (
8,
30,
37
40).
Ample evidence has demonstrated that in both rodent and human
cells, CPD repair is much faster in the coding region of this
gene than in the 3' downstream non-coding region, and is also
much faster in the T strand than in the NT strand (8,30,3740).
Based on these results, the concept of two subpathways for the
repair of bulky DNA damage by NER has emerged during the past
decade. Hereditary defects and somatic mutations that lead to
defects in either subpathway have also been found (
41
45).
Human cells are proficient in both pathways. Cultured rodent
cells, however, are proficient in TCR but are deficient in GGR
of CPDs (
9). It has been found that human xeroderma pigmentosum
complementation group C (XPC) cells are deficient in GGR, while
Cockayne syndrome (CS) cells and rodent ERCC6 cells are deficient
in TCR (
39,
40,
44
47). Interestingly, despite great efforts
by many laboratories, the mechanism of TCR in mammalian cells
remains unclear. In
E.coli cells, not only has the
mfd gene,
which regulates TCR, been identified, but also the role of the
mfd protein in TCR has been elucidated in a cell-free system
(
48,
49). In contrast, even though all the major NER factors,
including CS proteins, have been purified and efficient NER
can be reconstituted
in vitro (
13), the TCR phenomenon has not
yet been seen in a cell-free cell lysate system.
The current model proposed in the literature suggests that DNA damage that serves as a substrate for TCR should block transcription; this blockage gives rise to a special signal that attracts NER factors to the damaged site and subsequently allows NER to proceed (50). However, it has been found that in some cell-free cell lysate systems, blockage of the transcription process by DNA damage actually hinders NER (51,52). This finding led to the proposition that the blocked transcription machinery may retreat from the damaged site to allow the attraction of NER factors to the site (4), which raises the possibility that TCR could occur more often at the 5' end of the gene if significant amounts of abortive transcription take place. It is also possible that the transcriptionally active genes, because of transcription factor binding, exist in a state of chromatin structure that is more susceptible to NER, thereby allowing bulky DNA damage along the transcriptionally active genes to be evenly repaired in the T strand. It is well established that the 5' end of the DHFR gene is transcribed more frequently than the 3' end of the gene because of abortive transcription (53). Controversial results, however, have been reported with regard to the repair pattern of CPDs along the T strand of the DHFR gene. Using a Southern blot-based DNA repair assay, both uniform repair and a 5' to 3' polarity effect on CPD repair along the T strand of the DHFR gene have been reported (30,37). In this study, a much more sensitive methodT4 endo V incision in combination with LMPCRwas used to measure CPD repair in exons 1, 2 and 5 of the DHFR gene at nucleotide resolution. Our finding clearly demonstrates that CPD repair in the T strand of the DHFR gene is subject to a polarity effect; CPDs are repaired more quickly at the 5' than at the 3' end of the gene in different chromosomal positions that exhibit different chromatin structures, which suggests that blockage of transcription triggers the process of TCR. It is likely that the transcription process per se opens up a limited area, thus allowing the repair process to take place. Our results, however, are unable to determine whether the blocked transcription machinery retreats from the DNA damage site.
We have found that 90% of CPDs of genomic DNA in UV (15 J/m2)-irradiated CHO cells remained unrepaired after 24 h of post-irradiation incubation. These results are consistent with the notion that cultured rodent cells are deficient in GGR of CPDs (9). The finding that CPDs in the NT strand of exon 1 of the endogenous DHFR gene are repaired as efficiently as in the T strand is intriguing. We have previously demonstrated that the NT strand of exon 1 of the DHFR gene is not transcribed; therefore, the repair in this region is not due to TCR of an immediately upstream transcription unit (19). In this study, we demonstrate that neither the DNA sequence nor the TCR of the upstream OST gene contributes to the efficient repair of CPDs in the NT strand of exon 1 of the endogenous DHFR gene. Our results also suggest that the efficient repair is not due to the transcription of the DHFR gene since the DHFR genes in these three cell lines are all transcriptionally active. However, we have found that chromatin in the exon 1 region of the endogenous DHFR gene is much more sensitive to MN digestion than chromatin in exons 2 and 5 (19). We have also found that in the translocated DHFR gene, the disappearance of efficient CPD repair in the NT strand of exon 1 is accompanied by the disappearance of sensitivity to MN digestion in this region. Together, these results suggest that certain open chromatin structures in rodent cells allow efficient repair to occur in the NT strand without the help of the transcription process. The effect of this open chromatin structure on NER may be similar to the effect of blocked transcription on NER and most probably is able to attract NER factors to the damaged sites and allows NER to proceed. Recently, Sancar and colleagues have shown that the chromatin-remodeling factor SWI/SNF can greatly enhance NER on mononucleosome core substrates, but has no effect on NER on a naked DNA substrate (54). Perhaps the chromatin at exon 1 of the endogenous DHFR gene is favored to associate with this type of remodeling factor and/or is remodeled by histone acetylation or phosphorylation, which consequently allows NER to take place.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
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We thank Dr Steven Lloyd for the generous gift of T4 endo V,
Dr Aziz Sancar for the generous gift of plasmid pMS969 containing
the photolyase gene, and Dr Yen-Yee Tang for critical review.
This research was supported by ES03124 and ES08389.
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