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The Rad9-Rad1-Hus1 DNA Repair Clamp is Found in Microsporidia.

Anne Caroline Mascarenhas Dos SantosAlexander Thomas JulianJean-François Pombert
Published in: Genome biology and evolution (2022)
DNA repair is an important component of genome integrity and organisms with reduced repair capabilities tend to accumulate mutations at elevated rates. Microsporidia are intracellular parasites exhibiting high levels of genetic divergence postulated to originate from the lack of several proteins, including the heterotrimeric Rad9-Rad1-Hus1 DNA repair clamp. Microsporidian species from the Encephalitozoonidae have undergone severe streamlining with small genomes coding for about 2,000 proteins. The highly divergent sequences found in Microsporidia render functional inferences difficult such that roughly half of these 2,000 proteins have no known function. Using a structural homology-based annotation approach combining protein structure prediction and tridimensional similarity searches, we found that the Rad9-Rad1-Hus1 DNA clamp is present in Microsporidia, together with many other components of the DNA repair machinery previously thought to be missing from these organisms. Altogether, our results indicate that the DNA repair machinery is present and likely functional in Microsporidia.
Keyphrases
  • dna repair
  • dna damage
  • dna damage response
  • early onset
  • gram negative
  • dna methylation
  • rna seq
  • drug induced
  • amino acid
  • single cell
  • reactive oxygen species
  • nucleic acid