Affiliation:
1. Department of Cell Biology and Genetics, Centre for Biomedical Genetics, Erasmus University Rotterdam, 1 and
2. Laboratory of Health Effects Research, National Institute of Public Health and the Environment, 3720 BA Bilthoven, 2 The Netherlands
3. Department of Radiation Oncology, Daniël den Hoed Cancer Center, 3 3000 DR Rotterdam, and
Abstract
ABSTRACT
DNA interstrand cross-links (ICLs) represent lethal DNA damage, because they block transcription, replication, and segregation of DNA. Because of their genotoxicity, agents inducing ICLs are often used in antitumor therapy. The repair of ICLs is complex and involves proteins belonging to nucleotide excision, recombination, and translesion DNA repair pathways in
Escherichia coli
,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
, and mammals. We cloned and analyzed mammalian homologs of the
S. cerevisiae
gene
SNM1
(
PSO2
), which is specifically involved in ICL repair. Human Snm1, a nuclear protein, was ubiquitously expressed at a very low level. We generated mouse
SNM1
−/−
embryonic stem cells and showed that these cells were sensitive to mitomycin C. In contrast to
S. cerevisiae snm1
mutants, they were not significantly sensitive to other ICL agents, probably due to redundancy in mammalian ICL repair and the existence of other
SNM1
homologs. The sensitivity to mitomycin C was complemented by transfection of the human
SNM1
cDNA and by targeting of a genomic cDNA-murine
SNM1
fusion construct to the disrupted locus. We also generated mice deficient for murine
SNM1
. They were viable and fertile and showed no major abnormalities. However, they were sensitive to mitomycin C. The ICL sensitivity of the mammalian
SNM1
mutant suggests that
SNM1
function and, by implication, ICL repair are at least partially conserved between
S. cerevisiae
and mammals.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
118 articles.
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