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Chad A. Mirkin, Northwestern University, George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences. Photo by Bill Arsenault. 

DNA Blueprints Guide The Construction Of Specific Human Structures

Chad Mirkin discusses using DNA to build a three-dimensional structure out of gold, likening the process to building a house. Starting with basic materials such as bricks, wood, siding, stone and shingles, a construction team can build many different types of houses out of the same building blocks.
 
The article includes an audio recording of the full interview. Photo courtesy of the UCSD School of Medicine.
Repairing Broken DNA And The Consequences If We Can't Print E-mail
Science - Genetics & Genome
TS-Si News Service   
Sunday, 27 July 2008 17:00
Balncing the chromosomes.
Chromosomal Translocation
An individual can have all of the necessary chromosomal material, but some of it can reside on a different chromosome. This can happen when small pieces from two separate chromosomes switch places. This is not the same as having an extra or missing chromosome.
We all have 23 pairs of chromosomes for a total of 46. One chromosome in each pair comes from each parent. If it is our turn to make sperm or eggs, we ordinarily drop one chromosome from each pair so the sperm or egg contributes only 23 chromosomes to the future pregnancy.
Translocation example.
The outcome of the pregnancy depends on which chromosome each particular egg or sperm ends up with. As shown in the above illustration, if you have one normal chromosome4 and a normal 20, you also have one copy of each that contains the translocated information from the other chromosome.
• If your egg gets the chromosomes4 and20 that are normal, your offspring will be normal.
• If the egg gets both chromosomes that are translocated, the baby will be normal, but will carry the same chromosomal pattern as you.
In other cases, the developing embryo gets too much of one chromosome and not enough of the other.
• If the egg gets a good chromosome4 and a translocated 20, then there will be an extra portion of chromosome4 and a missing portion of chromosome 20. This is called an unbalanced translocation.
• The same problem occurs if your egg gets a normal20 and a translocated 4.
Statistics suggest a rather uniform breakdown.
• 50 percent of the eggs would likely generate unbalanced translocations,
• 25 percent would be balanced translocations and
• 25 percent would be normal.
The carrier of a balanced translocation appears — and for almost all purposes is — normal, since there is no missing or extra chromosomal material.
Miscarriage is the usual result for fetuses with an extra or missing chromosome. Theexceptions include some cases of Down or Turner syndrome that result in live birth.
In contrast, the problem with translocation seems to occur when trying to conceive.Many pregnancies that result from chromosomal imbalances miscarry before the woman is even aware that she has conceived. Two-thirds of known pregnancies result in healthy live births.
• one-third will be normal,
• one-third will carry the balanced translocation, and
• one-third will likely miscarry from an unbalanced chromosomal translocation.
This condition is not related to a woman's age. It is relatively rare, making up less than 5 percent of all cases of recurrent pregnancy loss. Prenatal chromosomal screening is usually suggested for all continuing pregnancies.

Translocated chromosome4/20 illustration courtesy of the NIH National Human Genome Research Institute, Division of Intramural Research.
For more at TS-Si.org, enter translocation onto our advanced search engine.
San Antonio, TX, USA. Repair mechanisms exist throughout the human body, but what happens when DNA is broken? The genome itself is the source of our body and any unrepaired — or poorly repaired — breaks can have profound consequences. The result can be anomalous birth conditions and often-fatal diseases.
 
Generally speaking, broken pieces of DNA in our cells reunite as they are repaired. These pieces tether together following a quick and precise [N1] process of mutual identification. A suppressor gene called ATM choreographs this fast-paced, but reliable, reassembly operation. But happens when an important mechanism for repair is itself broken?
 

Saccharomyces cerevisiae ATM orthologue suppresses break-induced chromosome translocations. Kihoon Lee, Yu Zhang & Sang Eun Lee. Nature 454(7203) 543-546. doi: 10.1038 / nature07054.

 
Sometimes the process goes awry. A known ATM mutation predisposes children to cancers, while other conditions may be a result. In the July 23 issue of Nature, researchers at The University of Texas (UT) Health Science Center at San Antonio describe the ATM gene’s regulatory work more fully than ever before.
 
Chromosomes are the tightly wrapped coils of DNA found in every cell. The paper fromm the Center’s Institute of Biotechnology is among the first to describe the molecular basis of errors occur when genes from one chromosome glom onto another chromosome. Ths is the process known as chromosome translocation.
 
The ATM gene
 
The ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) gene provides instructions for making a protein that located primarily in the nucleus of cells. ATM helps control the rate at which cells grow and divide. This protein also plays an important role in the normal development and activity of several or body systems, including the both nervous system and the immune system. Moreover, ATM is a tumor-suppressor gene.
 

… the DNA repair mechanism is extremely well conserved across species …

The ATM protein has also been recognized for its important role in recognizing recognizing damaged or broken DNA strands.
 
DNA can be damaged by agents such as toxic chemicals or radiation. Breaks in DNA strands also occur naturally when chromosomes exchange genetic material during cell division.
 
The ATM protein coordinates DNA repair by activating enzymes that fix the broken strands. Efficient repair of damaged DNA strands helps maintain the stability of the cell's genetic information.
 
Because of its central role in cell division and DNA repair, the ATM protein is of great interest in research, with a particular focus by cancer researchers.
 
The occasional glitch
 
In genetics, chromosomes that are not members of the same pair are called nonhomologous. An abnormality called chromosome translocation is caused by the rearrangement of parts between nonhomologous chromosomes. Translocations can be
  • balanced — an even exchange of material with no genetic information extra or missing (and ideally full functionality) or
     
  • unbalanced — where the exchange of chromosome material is unequal resulting in extra or missing genes.
Lead author Sang Eun Lee, Ph.D., associate professor of molecular medicine at the Health Science Center, suspected that chromosome translocations occur during DNA repair. DNA repair is the continuous process in which our genetic blueprint, or DNA, fixes damage caused by sunlight, diet, oxygen and chemicals that ding our DNA.
 
Sang Eun Lee, Ph.D., associate professor of molecular medicine at the University of Texas (UT) Health Science Center.

Dr. Sang Eun Lee, Ph.D., is an associate professor of molecular medicine at The University of Texas (UT) Health Science Center at San Antonio and a member of the Cancer Development and Progression Program of the Cancer Therapy & Research Center. [N2]

 
“This DNA repair process is usually highly accurate and reliable, but occasionally DNA makes the mistake of reshuffling or jumbling together material.” … “Translocations are found in many cancers, particularly leukemia."
 
According to Lee, "The presence of translocations predicts the success or failure of treatments for these cancers.” A rare and aggressive cancer, Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia, involves translocation of genetic material from chromosomes 9 and 22, for example.
 
“The thing we haven’t understood is how chromosome translocations happen,” Dr. Lee said. “Our study recreated translocations in yeast cells. We monitored the translocation events in the context of DNA repair, which we believed to be the culprit.”
 
ATM traffic control
 
The researchers observed ATM-led machinery that prohibits chromosome translocations during DNA repair. ATM “traffic-controls” many other proteins, Dr. Lee said.
 
“When damage occurs, a chromosome, like thread, can be broken,” he said. “With exposure to radiation or other mutating agent, a chromosome may break in multiple places. Thankfully our DNA moves to repair this.”
 
Snippets of DNA, separated from adjacent snippets of the same chromosome, must reunite with them quickly. “Partner selections are very important, and we found that this selection occurs in a very short window of time,” Dr. Lee said. “We also observed the tethering together. Again, the gene central to all of this is ATM.”
 
Role in cancer
 
The majority of children with ATM deficiency die at a young age from cancer. ATM mutation causes the disease ataxia telangiectsia. “We were missing why ATM causes cancers,” Dr. Lee said. “Its strategic role in DNA repair, described in this paper, explains it.”
 
These observations may make it possible to tweak cellular machinery to prevent translocations and to develop anti-cancer drugs that bypass ATM deficiency by regulating gene proteins that interact with ATM.
 
Yeast to humans
 
Dr. Lee said information gleaned from the yeast cell experiments is extremely relevant to human cells “since the DNA repair mechanism is extremely well conserved across species.”
 
“Dr. Lee is following these chromosome events in real time during the repair process,” said Z. Dave Sharp, Ph.D., associate professor and interim chairman of the Department of Molecular Medicine at the Health Science Center. “The proteins he studied are in yeast, but these proteins carry out the same function in human cells. That’s the reason this paper is in Nature.”
 


[N1] In science, precision is the of being reproducible. This is distinct from accuracy, the quality of being most near to the true value.  So, one could make an accurate measurement, but distrust its potential for precision since the measurement has not been reproduced.

This example is equivalent to the frequent lay confusion in the use of other term pairs (e.g., the common conflation of semantics and vocabulary, or sex and gender).

[N2] The National Institutes of Health (NIH) and The Leukemia Lymphoma Society funded the study.

Members of Dr. Sang Eun Lee’s lab who worked on the project are Kihoon Lee, graduate student, and Yu Zhang, Ph.D., former graduate student.

 


Saccharomyces cerevisiae ATM orthologue suppresses break-induced chromosome translocations. Kihoon Lee, Yu Zhang & Sang Eun Lee. Nature 454(7203) 543-546. doi: 10.1038 / nature07054.

Editor's Summary

Chromosomal translocations are characteristic of some leukaemias and childhood sarcomas. They are thought to be initiated by DNA breaks that are repaired by non-homologous end joining, a process which links, or 'heals', any two broken ends, regardless of whether they arose from the same double-strand break. In this work, Lee et al. have devised a system to replicate this type of translocation event in yeast. Using this system they find that Tel1, the yeast homologue of the ATM kinase which is mutated in ataxia-telangiectasia, is a key factor in suppressing non-homologous end joining of interchromosomal DNA ends.

First Parapgraph

Chromosome translocations are frequently associated with many types of blood-related cancers and childhood sarcomas. Detection of chromosome translocations assists in diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of these diseases; however, despite their importance to such diseases, the molecular mechanisms leading to chromosome translocations are not well understood. The available evidence indicates a role for non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) in their origin. Here we develop a yeast-based system that induces a reciprocal chromosome translocation by formation and ligation of breaks on two different chromosomes. We show that interchromosomal end joining is efficiently suppressed by the Tel1- and Mre11–Rad50–Xrs2-dependent pathway; this is distinct from the role of Tel1 in telomeric integrity and from Mec1- and Tel1-dependent checkpoint controls. Suppression of DSB-induced chromosome translocations depends on the kinase activity of Tel1 and Dun1, and the damage-induced phosphorylation of Sae2 and histone H2AX proteins. Tel1- and Sae2-dependent tethering and promotion of 5' to 3' degradation of broken chromosome ends discourage error-prone NHEJ and interchromosomal NHEJ, preserving chromosome integrity on DNA damage. Our results indicate that, like human ATM, Tel1 serves as a key regulator for chromosome integrity in the pathway that reduces the risk for DSB-induced chromosome translocations, and are probably pertinent to the oncogenic chromosome translocations in ATM-deficient cells.

 
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Last Updated on Sunday, 27 July 2008 17:19