Oxidative stress-mediated epigenetic regulation by G-quadruplexes.
Aaron M FlemingCynthia J BurrowsPublished in: NAR cancer (2021)
Many cancer-associated genes are regulated by guanine (G)-rich sequences that are capable of refolding from the canonical duplex structure to an intrastrand G-quadruplex. These same sequences are sensitive to oxidative damage that is repaired by the base excision repair glycosylases OGG1 and NEIL1-3. We describe studies indicating that oxidation of a guanosine base in a gene promoter G-quadruplex can lead to up- and downregulation of gene expression that is location dependent and involves the base excision repair pathway in which the first intermediate, an apurinic (AP) site, plays a key role mediated by AP endonuclease 1 (APE1/REF1). The nuclease activity of APE1 is paused at a G-quadruplex, while the REF1 capacity of this protein engages activating transcription factors such as HIF-1α, AP-1 and p53. The mechanism has been probed by in vitro biophysical studies, whole-genome approaches and reporter plasmids in cellulo. Replacement of promoter elements by a G-quadruplex sequence usually led to upregulation, but depending on the strand and precise location, examples of downregulation were also found. The impact of oxidative stress-mediated lesions in the G-rich sequence enhanced the effect, whether it was positive or negative.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- oxidative stress
- genome wide identification
- dna methylation
- signaling pathway
- cell proliferation
- dna binding
- genome wide
- dna damage
- dna repair
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- escherichia coli
- amino acid
- crispr cas
- induced apoptosis
- molecular dynamics simulations
- diabetic rats
- case control
- nitric oxide
- binding protein
- hydrogen peroxide
- protein protein