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    Date Issued2015 (1)2013 (1)2011 (1)2010 (1)2009 (2)Author
    Sage, Jay M. (6)
    Knight, Kendall L. (4)Gildemeister, Otto S. (3)Carruthers, Anthony (1)Cura, Anthony J. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (4)Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Pharmacology (1)Program in Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (1)Document TypeJournal Article (4)Book Chapter (1)Doctoral Dissertation (1)KeywordLife Sciences (3)Medicine and Health Sciences (3)Biochemistry (2)Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology (2)Rad51 Recombinase (2)View MoreJournalThe Journal of biological chemistry (2)American journal of physiology. Cell physiology (1)Mitochondrion (1)

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    Caffeine inhibits glucose transport by binding at the GLUT1 nucleotide-binding site

    Sage, Jay M.; Cura, Anthony J.; Lloyd, Kenneth P.; Carruthers, Anthony (2015-05-15)
    Glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) is the primary glucose transport protein of the cardiovascular system and astroglia. A recent study proposes that caffeine uncompetitive inhibition of GLUT1 results from interactions at an exofacial GLUT1 site. Intracellular ATP is also an uncompetitive GLUT1 inhibitor and shares structural similarities with caffeine, suggesting that caffeine acts at the previously characterized endofacial GLUT1 nucleotide-binding site. We tested this by confirming that caffeine uncompetitively inhibits GLUT1-mediated 3-O-methylglucose uptake in human erythrocytes [Vmax and Km for transport are reduced fourfold; Ki(app) = 3.5 mM caffeine]. ATP and AMP antagonize caffeine inhibition of 3-O-methylglucose uptake in erythrocyte ghosts by increasing Ki(app) for caffeine inhibition of transport from 0.9 +/- 0.3 mM in the absence of intracellular nucleotides to 2.6 +/- 0.6 and 2.4 +/- 0.5 mM in the presence of 5 mM intracellular ATP or AMP, respectively. Extracellular ATP has no effect on sugar uptake or its inhibition by caffeine. Caffeine and ATP displace the fluorescent ATP derivative, trinitrophenyl-ATP, from the GLUT1 nucleotide-binding site, but d-glucose and the transport inhibitor cytochalasin B do not. Caffeine, but not ATP, inhibits cytochalasin B binding to GLUT1. Like ATP, caffeine renders the GLUT1 carboxy-terminus less accessible to peptide-directed antibodies, but cytochalasin B and d-glucose do not. These results suggest that the caffeine-binding site bridges two nonoverlapping GLUT1 endofacial sites-the regulatory, nucleotide-binding site and the cytochalasin B-binding site. Caffeine binding to GLUT1 mimics the action of ATP but not cytochalasin B on sugar transport. Molecular docking studies support this hypothesis.
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    Human Rad51 promotes mitochondrial DNA synthesis under conditions of increased replication stress

    Sage, Jay M.; Knight, Kendall L. (2013-07-01)
    Homologous recombination is essential for productive DNA replication particularly under stress conditions. We previously demonstrated a stress-induced recruitment of Rad51 to mitochondria and a critical need for its activity in the maintenance of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) copy number. Using the human osteosarcoma cell line U20S, we show in the present study that recruitment of Rad51 to mitochondria under stress conditions requires ongoing mtDNA replication. Additionally, Rad51 levels in mitochondria increase in cells recovering from mtDNA depletion. Our findings highlight an important new role for Rad51 in supporting mtDNA replication, and further promote the idea that recombination is indispensable for sustaining DNA synthesis under conditions of replication stress.
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    Support of Mitochondrial DNA Replication by Human Rad51: A Dissertation

    Sage, Jay M. (2011-12-13)
    The function of homologous DNA recombination in human mitochondria has been a topic of ongoing debate for many years, with implications for fields ranging from DNA repair and mitochondrial disease to population genetics. While genetic and biochemical evidence supports the presence of a mitochondrial recombination activity, the purpose for this activity and the proteins involved have remained elusive. The work presented in this thesis was designed to evaluate the mitochondrial localization of the major recombinase protein in human cells, Rad51, as well as determine what function it plays in the maintenance of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) copy number that is critical for production of chemical energy through aerobic respiration. The combination of subcellular fractionation with immunoblotting and immunoprecipitation approaches used in this study clearly demonstrates that Rad51 is a bona fide mitochondrial protein that localizes to the matrix compartment following oxidative stress, where it physically interacts with mtDNA. Rad51 was found to be critical for mtDNA copy number maintenance under stress conditions. This requirement for Rad51 was found to be completely dependent on ongoing mtDNA replication, as treatment with the DNA polymerase gamma (Pol ϒ) inhibitor, ddC, suppresses both recruitment of Rad51 to the mitochondria following the addition of stress, as well as the mtDNA degradation observed when Rad51 has been depleted from the cell. The data presented here support a model in which oxidative stress induces a three-part response: (1) The recruitment of repair factors including Rad51 to the mitochondrial matrix, (2) the activation of mtDNA degradation systems to eliminate extensively or persistently damaged mtDNA, and (3) the increase in mtDNA replication in order to maintain copy number. The stress-induced decrease in mtDNA copy number observed when Rad51 is depleted is likely the result of failure to stabilize or repair replication forks that encounter blocking lesions resulting in further damaged to the mtDNA and its eventual degradation.
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    Discovery of a novel function for human Rad51: maintenance of the mitochondrial genome

    Sage, Jay M.; Gildemeister, Otto S.; Knight, Kendall L. (American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2010-06-18)
    Homologous recombination (HR) plays a critical role in facilitating replication fork progression when the polymerase complex encounters a blocking DNA lesion, and it also serves as the primary mechanism for error-free repair of DNA double strand breaks. Rad51 is the central catalyst of HR in all eukaryotes, and to this point studies of human Rad51 have focused exclusively on events occurring within the nucleus. However, substantial amounts of HR proteins exist in the cytoplasm, yet the function of these protein pools has not been addressed. Here, we provide the first demonstration that Rad51 and the related HR proteins Rad51C and Xrcc3 exist in human mitochondria. We show stress-induced increases in both the mitochondrial levels of each protein and, importantly, the physical interaction between Rad51 and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). Depletion of Rad51, Rad51C, or Xrcc3 results in a dramatic decrease in mtDNA copy number as well as the complete suppression of a characteristic oxidative stress-induced copy number increase. Our results identify human mtDNA as a novel Rad51 substrate and reveal an important role for HR proteins in the maintenance of the human mitochondrial genome.
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    Cellular redistribution of Rad51 in response to DNA damage: novel role for Rad51C.

    Gildemeister, Otto S.; Sage, Jay M.; Knight, Kendall L. (American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2009-11-13)
    Exposure of cells to DNA-damaging agents results in a rapid increase in the formation of subnuclear complexes containing Rad51. To date, it has not been determined to what extent DNA damage-induced cytoplasmic to nuclear transport of Rad51 may contribute to this process. We have analyzed subcellular fractions of HeLa and HCT116 cells and found a significant increase in nuclear Rad51 levels following exposure to a modest dose of ionizing radiation (2 grays). We also observed a DNA damage-induced increase in nuclear Rad51 in the Brca2-defective cell line Capan-1. To address a possible Brca2-independent mechanism for Rad51 nuclear transport, we analyzed subcellular fractions for two other Rad51-interacting proteins, Rad51C and Xrcc3. Rad51C has a functional nuclear localization signal, and although we found that the subcellular distribution of Xrcc3 was not significantly affected by DNA damage, there was a damage-induced increase in nuclear Rad51C. Furthermore, RNA interference-mediated depletion of Rad51C in HeLa and Capan-1 cells resulted in lower steady-state levels of nuclear Rad51 as well as a diminished DNA damage-induced increase. Our results provide important insight into the cellular regulation of Rad51 nuclear entry and a role for Rad51C in this process.
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    Mutations and Cell Defenses

    Gildemeister, Otto S.; Sage, Jay M.; Knight, Kendall L. (2009-06-01)
    The information required for the development and growth of an organism is encoded in its deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), the genetic material. Mutations, or changes to the information content of a cell’s DNA, can result in developmental defects or genetic diseases that may occur at any point in one’s life. Cancers are genetic diseases resulting from mutations that disrupt the ability of cells and tissues to control their own growth and proliferation. Given the critical importance of maintaining the integrity of the information encoded by DNA, evolution has resulted in various means by which a cell can either avoid mutations resulting from DNA damage, or repair damage once it has occurred. Despite the fact that all cells suffer continuous DNA damage caused either by normal metabolic processes, e.g., DNA replication and cell division, or by exposure to various environmental carcinogens, e.g. sunlight, tobacco and car exhaust, cells have a remarkable ability to both minimize the rate of mutation and to repair DNA damage. Human cells have five distinct enzyme systems that repair DNA damage, and the importance of each of these “DNA repair pathways” is highlighted by the fact that defects in any of the five result in higher incidences of specific types of cancers. In this Chapter we describe how each of these pathways operates to protect cells from acquiring mutations. Additionally, we briefly discuss recent ideas supporting an important role for stem cells in limiting the cancer potential of cells and tissues that have accumulated DNA damage. Gildemeister, O.S., Sage, J.M. and Knight, K.L. (2009) Mutations and Cell Defenses, in Pardee, A.D. and Stein, G.S. (eds.), The Biology and Treatment of Cancer: Understanding Cancer, Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 123-142. ISBN 0470009586, 9780470009581.
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