A recombinant fungal photolyase autonomously enters human cell nuclei to fix UV-induced DNA lesions.
Yuting BaoWeiguo FangPublished in: Biotechnology letters (2024)
Solar ultraviolet radiations induced DNA damages in human skin cells with cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) and (6-4) photoproducts (6-4PPs) as the most frequent lesions. CPDs are repaired much slower than 6-4PPs by the nucleotide excision repair pathway, which are thus the major lesions that interfere with key cellular processes and give rise to gene mutations, possibly resulting in skin cancer. In prokaryotes and multicellular eukaryotes other than placental mammals, CPDs can be rapidly repaired by CPD photolyases in one simple enzymatic reaction using the energy of blue light. In this study, we aim to construct recombinant CPD photolyases that can autonomously enter human cell nuclei to fix UV-induced CPDs. A fly cell penetration peptide and a viral nucleus localization signal peptide were recombined with a fungal CPD photolyase to construct a recombinant protein. This engineered CPD photolyase autonomously crosses cytoplasm and nuclear membrane of human cell nuclei, which then efficiently photo-repairs UV-induced CPD lesions in the genomic DNA. This further protects the cells by increasing SOD activity, and decreasing cellular ROSs, malondialdehyde and apoptosis.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- high glucose
- single cell
- diabetic rats
- cell free
- cell cycle arrest
- cell therapy
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- circulating tumor
- drug induced
- single molecule
- bone marrow
- sars cov
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- pluripotent stem cells
- nitric oxide
- small molecule
- copy number
- binding protein
- nucleic acid
- electron transfer