Durant Stephen T, Paffett Kimberly S, Shrivastav Meena, Timmins Graham S, Morgan William F, Nickoloff Jac A
Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA.
Mol Cell Biol. 2006 Aug;26(16):6047-55. doi: 10.1128/MCB.00444-06.
Ionizing radiation induces delayed genomic instability in human cells, including chromosomal abnormalities and hyperrecombination. Here, we investigate delayed genome instability of cells exposed to UV radiation. We examined homologous recombination-mediated reactivation of a green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene in p53-proficient human cells. We observed an approximately 5-fold enhancement of delayed hyperrecombination (DHR) among cells surviving a low dose of UV-C (5 J/m2), revealed as mixed GFP+/- colonies. UV-B did not induce DHR at an equitoxic (75 J/m2) dose or a higher dose (150 J/m2). UV is known to induce delayed hypermutation associated with increased oxidative stress. We found that hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) mutation frequencies were approximately 5-fold higher in strains derived from GFP+/- (DHR) colonies than in strains in which recombination was directly induced by UV (GFP+ colonies). To determine whether hypermutation was directly caused by hyperrecombination, we analyzed hprt mutation spectra. Large-scale alterations reflecting large deletions and insertions were observed in 25% of GFP+ strains, and most mutants had a single change in HPRT. In striking contrast, all mutations arising in the hypermutable GFP+/- strains were small (1- to 2-base) changes, including substitutions, deletions, and insertions (reminiscent of mutagenesis from oxidative damage), and the majority were compound, with an average of four hprt mutations per mutant. The absence of large hprt deletions in DHR strains indicates that DHR does not cause hypermutation. We propose that UV-induced DHR and hypermutation result from a common source, namely, increased oxidative stress. These two forms of delayed genome instability may collaborate in skin cancer initiation and progression.
电离辐射会在人类细胞中诱发延迟性基因组不稳定,包括染色体异常和超重组。在此,我们研究暴露于紫外线辐射的细胞的延迟性基因组不稳定情况。我们检测了p53功能正常的人类细胞中同源重组介导的绿色荧光蛋白(GFP)基因的重新激活。我们观察到,在低剂量紫外线-C(5 J/m²)照射下存活的细胞中,延迟性超重组(DHR)增强了约5倍,表现为GFP+/-混合菌落。紫外线-B在等毒性剂量(75 J/m²)或更高剂量(150 J/m²)下不会诱发DHR。已知紫外线会诱发与氧化应激增加相关的延迟性超突变。我们发现,源自GFP+/-(DHR)菌落的菌株中次黄嘌呤磷酸核糖转移酶(HPRT)突变频率比紫外线直接诱导重组的菌株(GFP+菌落)高约5倍。为了确定超突变是否直接由超重组引起,我们分析了hprt突变谱。在25%的GFP+菌株中观察到反映大片段缺失和插入的大规模改变,且大多数突变体的HPRT只有单一变化。与之形成鲜明对比的是,在超突变的GFP+/-菌株中出现的所有突变都是小的(1至2个碱基)变化,包括替换、缺失和插入(类似于氧化损伤引起的诱变),且大多数是复合突变,每个突变体平均有四个hprt突变。DHR菌株中不存在大片段hprt缺失表明DHR不会导致超突变。我们提出,紫外线诱导的DHR和超突变源于共同的来源,即氧化应激增加。这两种形式的延迟性基因组不稳定可能在皮肤癌的起始和进展过程中协同作用。