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Mol Cell Biol, July 1998, p. 4391-4399, Vol. 18, No. 7
Departments of Medicine and
Biochemistry1 and
Howard Hughes Medical
Institute and Department of Genetics,2 Stanford
University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305
Received 8 September 1997/Returned for modification 23 October
1997/Accepted 19 March 1998
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
p48 Activates a UV-Damaged-DNA Binding Factor and
Is Defective in Xeroderma Pigmentosum Group E Cells That Lack
Binding Activity
SUMMARY
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
REFERENCES
SUMMARY
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A subset of xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) group E cells lack a factor that binds to DNA damaged by UV radiation. This factor can be purified to homogeneity as p125, a 125-kDa polypeptide. However, when cDNA encoding p125 is translated in vitro, only a small fraction binds to UV-damaged DNA, suggesting that a second factor is required for the activation of p125. We discovered that most hamster cell lines expressed inactive p125, which was activated in somatic cell hybrids containing human chromosome region 11p11.2-11cen. This region excluded p125 but included p48, which encodes a 48-kDa polypeptide known to copurify with p125 under some conditions. Expression of human p48 activated p125 binding in hamster cells and increased p125 binding in human cells. No such effects were observed from expression of p48 containing single amino acid substitutions from XP group E cells that lacked binding activity, demonstrating that the p48 gene is defective in those cells. Activation of p125 occurred by a "hit-and-run" mechanism, since the presence of p48 was not required for subsequent binding. Nevertheless, p48 was capable of forming a complex with p125 either bound to UV-damaged DNA or in free solution. It is notable that hamster cells fail to efficiently repair cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in nontranscribed DNA and fail to express p48, which contains a WD motif with homology to proteins that reorganize chromatin. We propose that p48 plays a role in repairing lesions that would otherwise remain inaccessible in nontranscribed chromatin.
INTRODUCTION
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Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by abnormal sensitivity to UV radiation, predisposition to skin cancer, and defective nucleotide excision repair (8, 10). Cell fusion experiments demonstrate that XP consists of seven complementation groups (A through G). Genes have been identified for each of the groups with the exception of group E.
Human and monkey cells contain a binding activity which has high specificity for DNA damaged by UV but which also recognizes DNA damaged by cisplatin, nitrogen mustard, denaturation, and depurination (6, 7, 19, 33). This UV-damaged-DNA binding (UV-DDB) activity appears to play a role in nucleotide excision repair: it is absent in a subset of XP group E cells, which like all XP cells are deficient in DNA repair (7, 22, 27), and it is expressed at higher levels in human tumor cell lines, which were selected for resistance to cisplatin and which display cross-resistance to UV radiation and enhanced DNA repair (6).
Purification of UV-DDB activity to apparent homogeneity yields a single
polypeptide of 125 kDa (p125) (2, 21, 25). When partially
purified preparations of p125 were microinjected into XPE
cells (XPE cells without binding activity), nucleotide excision repair
was restored to normal levels (26). Tryptic peptides derived
from purified p125 were sequenced, and the amino acid sequences were
used to isolate monkey (41) and human (12, 20)
cDNAs, each containing an open reading frame of the appropriate size.
The identity of the p125 cDNA was confirmed by translation in rabbit reticulocyte extracts and demonstration that a small fraction
bound specifically to UV-damaged DNA (20). However, the
great majority of the in vitro-translated p125 lacked binding activity,
suggesting that full activation of p125 might require a second factor
that was present in limiting amounts in the rabbit reticulocyte
extracts.
Here we report that p125 binding activity is absent in most hamster
cell lines but is activated in somatic cell hybrids containing human
chromosome 11. Analysis of chromosome 11 fragments excluded the region
containing the p125 gene (DDB1, Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man [OMIM] entry 600045) but included the p48 gene
(DDB2, OMIM entry 600811), which encodes a 48-kDa polypeptide that
copurifies with p125 under some conditions (25).
Transfection of the hamster cells with wild-type human p48
cDNA conferred binding activity, demonstrating that p48 is required for
activation of p125. On the other hand, transfection with p48
cDNA derived from XPE
cells failed to confer binding
activity, demonstrating that the p48 gene is inactivated by
mutation in XPE
cells.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Cell cultures.
Chinese hamster-human hybrid cells (13,
14, 28, 31) were grown either in RPMI medium with 20% fetal
bovine serum (FBS) and 1% hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine (HAT)
solution (XII-2D-1f HAT and XII-4A-1d-E HAT cells), in RPMI medium with
20% FBS (XVII-10A-12a, XXI-22A-g-1a, XXI-23A-2c, XXI-54B-1i, and
XV-18A-7a-N4 cells), or in minimal essential medium with 15% FBS
(DonTK
and V79/380-6 cell lines). All other cell lines were grown in
Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium with 10% FBS. All media were
supplemented with 1% glutamine and 1% antibiotic (penicillin and
streptomycin).
Azacytidine treatment. Azacytidine treatment was carried out as described previously (35). Briefly, 2 × 105 cells were seeded onto a 100-mm-diameter dish and grown for 15 h in normal medium, for 15 h in medium containing 3 µg of freshly dissolved 5-azacytidine (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.) per ml, for 24 h in normal medium, and then for 15 h in 5-azacytidine-containing medium again. Whole-cell extract was prepared 48 h after the second azacytidine treatment.
Preparation of whole-cell extract.
Confluent cells in a
100-mm-diameter dish were harvested in 1 ml of ice-cold
phosphate-buffered saline and pelleted by centrifugation for 1 min at
12,000 × g. The pellet was resuspended in lysis buffer (700 mM NaCl, 1 mM EGTA, 1 mM EDTA, 10 mM
-glycerophosphate, 2 mM
MgCl2, 10 mM KCl, 1 mM sodium vanadate, 1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1% Nonidet P-40,
and pepstatin, leupeptin, and aprotinin [each at 10 µg/ml]) and
incubated at 4°C for 30 min with gentle shaking. The supernatant was
saved after centrifugation at 12,000 × g for 30 min at
4°C. Protein concentrations were measured by a modification of the
Bradford method (4).
Electrophoretic mobility shift assay for binding activity. Whole-cell extracts were assayed for UV-DDB activity by an electrophoretic mobility shift assay as described previously (21). Briefly, the 32P-labeled 148-bp DNA probe (f148) was prepared and either left intact or damaged with a UV dose of 300 or 5,000 J/m2. Extracts were incubated with 0.2 ng of DNA probe and a mixture of unlabeled salmon sperm DNA (500 ng) and poly(dI-dC) (1,000 ng) to mask the effects of nonspecific DNA binding proteins. The mixture was then resolved by nondenaturing gel electrophoresis, and the gel was dried and exposed to X-ray film.
Anti-FLAG (M2; IBI-Kodak, New Haven, Conn.) or antihemagglutinin (HA) (12CA5; Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, Ind.) antibodies were used in a mobility supershift assay as described previously (36). Briefly, cell extracts were preincubated at room temperature for 20 min with serial dilutions of antibodies (10
1 to
10
3), incubated at room temperature for 30 min with DNA
probe, and then resolved by nondenaturing gel electrophoresis.
Northern blot analysis. Total RNA was prepared and analyzed by Northern blotting as described previously (37). Probe for p125 mRNA was prepared by digesting p125 cDNA with the restriction enzymes EcoRI and EagI and then eluting a 527-bp DNA fragment from a 1% agarose gel. RNA was denatured, resolved on a 0.9% formaldehyde agarose gel, transferred to a Hybond N nylon membrane (Amersham, Arlington Heights, Ill.), and cross-linked with UV (Stratalinker UV source; Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.). The membrane was hybridized to 32P-labeled probe at 65°C for 24 h in 1× nylon wash buffer (14% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 130 mM Na2HPO4, 14 mM EDTA, and 0.2% Triton X-100) prewarmed to 65°C. The membrane was washed twice in 0.5× nylon wash buffer at 65°C for 10 min and then exposed to X-ray film.
Isolation of p48 and p125 cDNAs. Human p48 cDNA was isolated from a Jurkat T-cell leukemia cDNA library by two-step PCR amplification. The oligonucleotide primers were synthesized from the reported p48 nucleotide sequence as follows: 5' outer primer, 5'-CCCGCCTTGTTTCTCCCCAG; 3' outer primer, 5'-CTTGCAGGACTTGATCCCATGTG; 5' inner primer, 5'-ACGGAGAGTACTATGGCTCCCAAGAAA; 3' inner primer, 5'-TGGGCTCCAAGGCCTTGTCTGGC; 5' innermost primer, 5'-TGTCCAGCAGGGGCTCCAGCA; and 3' innermost primer, 5'-GCCTTGATGGGTGTGAGGTGC. In the first amplification step the 5' outer primer and the 3' outer primer were used, and in the second step 1/10 of the first PCR product and the 5' inner primer and 3' inner primer were used. The amplified p48 cDNA was cloned into the pBJ5 mammalian expression vector (40) either by itself or with the FLAG epitope sequence (45) fused to the region encoding the N terminus. The cDNA expression vector for p48 without FLAG contains two base changes leading to two amino acid changes near the N terminus, L53P and F110L, due to errors occurring during PCR amplification. The FLAG-p48 cDNA does not contain any base changes compared to the reported p48 cDNA sequence (12). The cDNAs containing the nucleotide changes found in two types of XPE cells (resulting in R273H in XP2415 cells and K244E in XP82TO cells) (30) were isolated by reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR), as follows. Total RNA was prepared from XP2415 and XP82TO cells as described previously (37), and 1 µg of the total RNA was reverse transcribed from random hexamer primers and amplified by PCR in two steps. The first step used the 5' outer primer and 3' outer primer, and the second step used 1/10 of the first PCR product and the 5' innermost primer and 3' innermost primer. The amplified PCR product was digested with EcoRV and HincII and then used to replace the corresponding EcoRV-to-HincII fragment in the p48 expression vectors. The nucleotide changes reported for XP2415 and XP82TO cells were confirmed by DNA sequencing.
Human p125 cDNA was isolated from a Jurkat T-cell leukemia cDNA library as described previously (20). The cDNA was cloned into pBJ5 either alone or with the FLAG epitope sequence fused to the region encoding the N terminus or the HA epitope sequence fused to the region encoding the C terminus.Transfection. Cells (2 × 106) were seeded onto a 100-mm-diameter dish and transfected as a monolayer after overnight growth by coprecipitation of DNA with calcium phosphate transfection as described previously (9). The cells were transiently transfected with 24 µg of pBJ5-derived expression vector and 1 µg of pRSV-luciferase (11) to normalize the transfection efficiencies. Whole-cell extracts were prepared 24 or 48 h after transfection to measure the binding activity, luciferase activity, and the expression of FLAG-p48 by immunoblotting.
Immunoprecipitation. Whole-cell extracts (210 µg) were made from 293T cells transfected with expression vectors for p125 and p48 and then incubated at 4°C for 3 h with 5 µg of anti-FLAG or anti-HA antibodies. Proteins bound to the antibodies were precipitated by incubation with 10 µl of protein G-Sepharose (Pharmacia, Piscataway, N.J.) at 4°C for 1 h with shaking. After the protein G-Sepharose was washed, the bound proteins were eluted by being boiled for 5 min in 30 µl of SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) sample buffer.
Immunoblot analysis. Whole-cell extracts (10 to 50 µg) and immunoprecipitated proteins were resolved by SDS-PAGE, transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane (Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, N.H.), and probed with mouse anti-FLAG immunoglobulin G (IgG) (1:250 dilution) or mouse anti-HA IgG (1:250 dilution) antibodies and then with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG antibodies (1:1,000 dilution; Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, Calif.). Antibody binding was detected by enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL reagents; Amersham, Little Chalfont, Buckinghamshire, England).
RESULTS
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p125 is expressed but inactive in hamster cell lines.
In the
course of screening different animal cells for UV-DDB activity, we
found that monkey and rabbit cells had levels similar to those of
wild-type human cells. Surprisingly, mouse cells had much lower levels,
and of 10 hamster cell lines tested, 9 showed no detectable activity
and 1 (DonTK
) showed only a low level of activity (see Fig. 1A and
4A; other data not shown).
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Human chromosome 11p11.2-11cen activates p125 in hamster cells. To identify this activating gene, binding activity was measured in several hamster-human hybrid cell lines (13, 14, 28, 31) (Fig. 4A). Binding activity was expressed only in hybrids containing human chromosome 11, while all other chromosomes were excluded based on discordance of p125 activation in hybrids (Fig. 4B).
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p125 is activated by transfection of p48 cDNA. The levels of p48 mRNA in the hamster cells were too low to be detected by Northern blotting either before or after azacytidine treatment (data not shown). Therefore, to directly test the possibility that expression of p48 activates p125, human p48 cDNA and FLAG-p48 cDNA were constructed by PCR amplification from a human Jurkat cell cDNA library and transiently transfected into hamster (V79) and human (293T) cells (Fig. 5). Both cDNA constructs conferred binding activity on V79 cells, demonstrating that p48 is required for p125 activation in hamster cells. Furthermore, both cDNA constructs increased binding activity in 293T cells, demonstrating that p48 is limiting for binding activity in human cells (Fig. 5; compare lane 2 to lanes 4 and 10). Note that the greatly increased binding activity in the 293T transfectants was accompanied by the appearance of additional bands above position B2. These correspond, at least in part, to multiple binding events of p125 to different lesions on the same molecule of probe DNA, a phenomenon previously characterized in experiments with purified preparations of p125 (21).
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p48 is inactivated by mutations in XPE
cells.
The p48 cDNAs from two XPE
cell lines each
encode a single amino acid substitution (R273H in XP2415 cells and
K244E in XP82TO cells) (30). To rule out the possibility
that these amino acid substitutions are merely innocent polymorphisms,
cDNA expression vectors were made by RT-PCR amplification of mRNA
harvested from XP2415 and XP82TO cells. The sequencing of these cDNAs
confirmed the nucleotide differences previously reported
(30).
cell lines were expressed but nonfunctional.
Failure to detect FLAG-p48 in the transiently transfected V79 cells was
consistent with the 2,500-fold- to 6,500-fold-lower level of expression
of the cotransfected luciferase reporter gene in those cells. V79 cells
can indeed support expression of FLAG-p48 protein, since the protein
was detected by immunoblotting in two independent V79 clonal cell lines
stably transformed with the FLAG-p48 expression vector (data not
shown). Thus, even the low levels of FLAG-p48 in transiently
transfected V79 cells were sufficient to activate detectable levels of
binding activity.
p48 forms a complex with p125 on damaged DNA. Protein-DNA complexes dependent on p48 and p125 were examined further by using transfection experiments and anti-FLAG antibodies. Extracts (2 µg) from the 293T cells produced at least three shifted bands, and extracts (2 µg) from V79 cells produced two shifted bands (Fig. 5), corresponding to multiple binding events to each molecule of DNA (21). To simplify the analysis, f148 DNA was UV irradiated with 300 J/m2, a dose that produced one or no lesions on each DNA molecule (21). In V79 extracts, only one protein-DNA complex appeared, and this complex was greatly increased after transient transfections with p48 or FLAG-p48 expression vectors (Fig. 6). On the other hand, when 293T cells were transfected with p48 or FLAG-p48 expression vectors, a second protein-DNA complex was observed (Fig. 6), consistent with the formation of a larger complex. Furthermore, addition of anti-FLAG antibody specifically supershifted the larger complex to a new position higher in the gel (Fig. 6), demonstrating that this complex contained p48. By contrast, the major protein-DNA complex, which migrated at a position lower in the gel, was unaffected.
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p48 forms a complex with p125 in solution. To obtain further evidence for an interaction between p48 and p125 in vivo, 293T cells were cotransfected with expression vectors for FLAG-p48 and p125-HA (Fig. 8). Extracts from the transfected cells were then incubated with anti-FLAG or anti-HA antibodies to immunoprecipitate FLAG-p48 or p125-HA and interacting proteins. When the immunoprecipitated proteins were resolved by SDS-PAGE and blotted with anti-FLAG and anti-HA antibodies, both FLAG-p48 and p125-HA were detected when either of the antibodies was used for immunoprecipitation (Fig. 8). Thus, even in crude extracts and in the absence of DNA substrate, p48 will interact with p125.
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DISCUSSION
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p48 is required for the activation of p125. Purification of UV-DDB activity to homogeneity yields a single 125-kDa polypeptide (p125) (2, 21, 25). However, two lines of evidence indicate that p125 must be activated by a second factor before it can bind to UV-damaged DNA. First, only a small fraction of p125 expressed in vitro has binding activity (20). Second, we discovered that although Chinese hamster cell lines express p125 mRNA, the p125 protein is completely or largely inactive.
Significantly, the hamster cells were fully competent to express active p125, since treatment with azacytidine induced binding activity. Therefore, a panel of hamster-human somatic cell hybrids was tested to identify the human chromosomal fragment that would activate p125. The somatic cell hybrids identified an activating region at 11p11.2-11cen. Surprisingly, this region included the p48 gene, which encodes a polypeptide that copurifies with p125 under some conditions but is not required for binding activity in vitro, since fractions containing p125 but not p48 remain active for binding (2, 21, 25). We proved that p48 is required for the activation of p125 in vivo, since the transfection of hamster cells with a p48 cDNA expression vector induced damage-specific binding activity. Furthermore, the transfection of human cells with p48 cDNA led to a marked increase in binding activity, demonstrating that p48 is limiting for binding activity in human cells. How does p48 activate p125? Significantly, p48 is not contained in the complexes of activated p125 with UV-damaged DNA in transfected hamster cells, and it is contained only in a minor component of the binding activity in transfected 293T cells (Fig. 6 and 7). It appears that p48 associates with p125, mediates p125 activation, and then dissociates from the activated p125 by a "hit-and-run" mechanism. Thus, p48 may mediate posttranslational modification of p125, either by acting directly on p125 or by acting indirectly by presenting p125 for modification by a third protein. Although most of the binding activity in extracts does not contain p48 and is due to a "hit-and-run" activation of p125, we have demonstrated that a small fraction of the binding activity is due to a p48-p125 complex bound to UV-damaged DNA. This complex is almost certainly due to a cooperative interaction between p48 and p125 rather than to separate binding events, since we have demonstrated that p48 and p125 will interact with each other in an unbound state, and since the addition of purified p48 will alter the characteristics of the DNA-binding footprint of purified p125 without changing its size (38). Nevertheless, the physiological significance of the p48-p125-DNA complex in vivo remains to be determined.Roles of p48 and p125 in nucleotide excision repair. What are the roles of p48 and p125 in DNA repair? In vitro, the p125 protein binds to UV-damaged dinucleotides with a 500,000-to-1 preference over undamaged dinucleotides (21) but confers only a twofold increase in the repair of naked DNA reconstituted from purified proteins (1). In vivo, hamster cells differ from human cells not only by failing to express p48 but also by failing to efficiently repair UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in nontranscribed DNA (3, 16). To explain these observations, we hypothesize that p48, perhaps in association with p125, plays a role in disassembly of nontranscribed chromatin at the sites of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers.
Results of a database search are at least consistent with this hypothesis: p48 contains a WD motif with 24 to 49% identity to the WD motifs in a subfamily of WD repeat proteins involved in the reorganization of chromatin (Fig. 9). Included in this subfamily are subunits of chromatin assembly factors (CAFs) for humans (CAF-1 p48) (44), Drosophila melanogaster (CAF-1 p55) (43), and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Msi1p) (23), as well as yeast Hat2p, the histone recognition subunit of a histone H4 acetyltransferase (32). Notably, human CAF-1 is required for reassembly of chromatin coupled to nucleotide excision repair (15), and disruption of yeast Msi1p confers hypersensitivity to UV radiation (23).
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cells were severely defective in
excising 6-4 photoproducts from naked DNA (24).
Surprisingly, both XPE+ and XPE
extracts were
rescued by purified human RPA (the single-stranded DNA binding protein,
replication protein A [RPA]) but not by purified p125, even though no
mutations were found in the RPA gene (24). A possible
explanation for this puzzling result is that 6-4 photoproducts are
targeted for excision repair by two different mechanisms, one involving
RPA and one involving p125. RPA will bind directly to 6-4 photoproducts
(5) and can interact cooperatively with XPA protein in
binding to damaged DNA in vitro (17). Perhaps these
properties are sufficient to repair 6-4 photoproducts when RPA is added
to biochemical excess in a cell-free system. On the other hand, p125
may require further activation beyond its DNA binding activity in order
to mediate the repair of 6-4 photoproducts, and this activation did not
occur in the XPE extracts.
p48 mutations in XPE
cells.
The p125
cDNA sequences are identical in HeLa cells, three XPE+ cell
lines, and two XPE
cell lines (30). On the
other hand, the p48 cDNA sequences in the two
XPE
cell lines encode single amino acid substitutions
(R273H in XP2415 cells and K244E in XP82TO cells) (30), both
of which are located in the WD motif. These substitutions may not have
had functional consequences, since the analysis included only four cell
lines with intact binding activity (HeLa cells and the three
XPE+ cell lines). Furthermore, R273H replaces the highly
conserved arginine in the WD motif with histidine, another basic amino
acid (Fig. 9). K244E replaces a lysine shared by another member of the
WD motif subfamily with a glutamate conserved in six other members. In
the absence of functional studies, these subtle substitutions might
very well have proven to be innocent polymorphisms. This study
demonstrates that both amino acid substitutions in p48 abolish the
activation of p125, proving that they are indeed inactivating mutations
rather than polymorphisms. Thus, XPE
cells have mutations
in the p48 gene. On the other hand, XPE+ cells do not
appear to have mutations in either p48 or p125 and therefore have
mutations at another locus that remains to be identified.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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This work was supported by grant DAMD 17-94-J-4350 from the U.S. Army Medical Research and Material Command and funds from Graham and Jane Nissen (to G.C.) and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (to U.F.).
We thank Vaughn Smider, Virginia Goss, Ola Hammarsten, and Jean Tang for helpful discussions and Yun Kee for helping with sequence analysis.
FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: M-211, Division of Oncology, Department of Medicine, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA 94305. Phone: (650) 725-6442. Fax: (650) 725-1420. E-mail: chu{at}cmgm.stanford.edu.
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