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Neil2-null Mice Accumulate Oxidized DNA Bases in the Transcriptionally Active Sequences of the Genome and Are Susceptible to Innate Inflammation
Anirban Chakraborty, Maki Wakamiya, Tatiana Venkova‐Canova, Raj K. Pandita, Leopoldo Aguilera-Aguirre, Altaf H. Sarker, Dharmendra Kumar Singh, Koa Hosoki, Thomas G. Wood, Gulshan Sharma, Victor J. Cardenas, Partha S. Sarkar, Sanjiv Sur, Tej K. Pandita, István Boldogh
Journal of Biological Chemistry · 2015 · ▲ 103 citations
Genomic instability
Telomere attrition
Epigenetic alterations
Chronic inflammation
Cell culture / in vitro
Human
Mouse
In vitro
Abstract
Why mammalian cells possess multiple DNA glycosylases (DGs) with overlapping substrate ranges for repairing oxidatively damaged bases via the base excision repair (BER) pathway is a long-standing question. To determine the biological role of these DGs, null animal models have been generated. Here, we report the generation and characterization of mice lacking Neil2 (Nei-like 2). As in mice deficient in each of the other four oxidized base-specific DGs (OGG1, NTH1, NEIL1, and NEIL3), Neil2-null mice show no overt phenotype. However, middle-aged to old Neil2-null mice show the accumulation of oxidative genomic damage, mostly in the transcribed regions. Immuno-pulldown analysis from wild-type (WT) mouse tissue showed the association of NEIL2 with RNA polymerase II, along with Cockayne syndrome group B protein, TFIIH, and other BER proteins. Chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis from mouse tissue showed co-occupancy of NEIL2 and RNA polymerase II only on the transcribed genes, consistent with our earlier in vitro findings on NEIL2's role in transcription-coupled BER. This study provides the first in vivo evidence of genomic region-specific repair in mammals. Furthermore, telomere(definition) loss and genomic instability were observed at a higher frequency in embryonic fibroblasts from Neil2-null mice than from the WT. Moreover, Neil2-null mice are much more responsive to inflammatory agents than WT mice. Taken together, our results underscore the importance of NEIL2 in protecting mammals from the development of various pathologies that are linked to genomic instability and/or inflammation. NEIL2 is thus likely to play an important role in long term genomic maintenance, particularly in long-lived mammals such as humans.
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- 10.1074/jbc.m115.658146
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- 2026-06-02 MST
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APA
Chakraborty, A., Wakamiya, M., Venkova‐Canova, T., Pandita, R.K., Aguilera-Aguirre, L., Sarker, A.H., Singh, D.K., Hosoki, K., Wood, T.G., Sharma, G., Cardenas, V.J., Sarkar, P.S., Sur, S., Pandita, T.K., Boldogh, I., & Hazra, T.K. (2015). Neil2-null Mice Accumulate Oxidized DNA Bases in the Transcriptionally Active Sequences of the Genome and Are Susceptible to Innate Inflammation. <em>Journal of Biological Chemistry</em>. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.m115.658146
Vancouver
Chakraborty A, Wakamiya M, Venkova‐Canova T, Pandita RK, Aguilera-Aguirre L, Sarker AH, et al. Neil2-null Mice Accumulate Oxidized DNA Bases in the Transcriptionally Active Sequences of the Genome and Are Susceptible to Innate Inflammation. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2015. doi:10.1074/jbc.m115.658146.
BibTeX
@article{anirban2015Neilnu,
title = {Neil2-null Mice Accumulate Oxidized DNA Bases in the Transcriptionally Active Sequences of the Genome and Are Susceptible to Innate Inflammation},
author = {Anirban Chakraborty and Maki Wakamiya and Tatiana Venkova‐Canova and Raj K. Pandita and Leopoldo Aguilera-Aguirre and Altaf H. Sarker and Dharmendra Kumar Singh and Koa Hosoki and Thomas G. Wood and Gulshan Sharma and Victor J. Cardenas and Partha S. Sarkar and Sanjiv Sur and Tej K. Pandita and István Boldogh and Tapas K. Hazra},
journal = {Journal of Biological Chemistry},
year = {2015},
doi = {10.1074/jbc.m115.658146},
}
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