DNA base excision repair in human malaria parasites is predominantly by a long-patch pathway

Brett M. Haltiwanger, Yoshihiro Matsumoto, Emmanuelle Nicolas, Grigory L. Dianov, Vilhelm A. Bohr, Theodore F. Taraschi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

47 Scopus citations

Abstract

Mammalian cells repair apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites in DNA by two distinct pathways: a polymerase β (pol β)-dependent, short- (one nucleotide) patch base excision repair (BER) pathway, which is the major route, and a PCNA-dependent, long- (several nucleotide) patch BER pathway. The ability of a cell-free lysate prepared from asexual Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasites to remove uracil and repair AP sites in a variety of DNA substrates was investigated. We found that the lysate contained uracil DNA glycosylase, AP endonuclease, DNA polymerase, flap endonuclease, and DNA ligase activities. This cell-free lysate effectively repaired a regular or synthetic AP site on a covalently closed circular (ccc) duplex plasmid molecule or a long (382 bp), linear duplex DNA fragment, or a regular or reduced AP site in short (28 bp), duplex oligonucleotides. Repair of the AP sites in the various DNA substrates involved a long-patch BER pathway. This biology is different from mammalian cells, yeast, Xenopus, and Escherichia coli, which predominantly repair AP sites by a one-nucleotide patch BER pathway. The apparent absence of a short-patch BER pathway in P. falciparum may provide opportunities to develop antimalarial chemotherapeutic strategies for selectively damaging the parasites in vivo and will allow the characterization of the long-patch BER pathway without having to knock-out or inactivate a short-patch BER pathway, which is necessary in mammalian cells.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)763-772
Number of pages10
JournalBiochemistry
Volume39
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2000

Keywords

  • Animals
  • Binding Sites/genetics
  • Carbon-Oxygen Lyases/metabolism
  • Cell-Free System/enzymology
  • DNA Glycosylases
  • DNA Repair
  • DNA, Circular/metabolism
  • DNA, Protozoan/metabolism
  • DNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) Lyase
  • Deoxyribonuclease IV (Phage T4-Induced)
  • Endodeoxyribonucleases/metabolism
  • Enzyme Activation
  • Escherichia coli Proteins
  • Flap Endonucleases
  • Humans
  • Malaria, Falciparum/enzymology
  • N-Glycosyl Hydrolases/metabolism
  • Plasmids/metabolism
  • Plasmodium falciparum/enzymology
  • Uracil-DNA Glycosidase

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