Published: Vol 4, Iss 11, Jun 5, 2014 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.1140 Views: 9229
Reviewed by: Fanglian HeClaudia CatalanottiAnonymous reviewer(s)
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Abstract
ROS-induced DNA damage is repaired in living cells within a temporal and spatial context, and chromatin structure is critical to a consideration of DNA repair processes in situ. It’s well known that chromatin remodeling factors participate in many DNA damage repair pathways, indicating the importance of chromatin remodeling in facilitating DNA damage repair. To date, there has been no method to induce site-specific oxidative DNA damage in living cells. Therefore, it is not known whether the DNA repair mechanisms differ within active or condensed chromatin. We recently established a novel method, DTG (Damage Targeted at one Genome-site), to study DNA damage response of reactive oxygen species (ROS)-induced DNA damage in living cell at one genome loci with active or inactive transcription. For this, we integrated a tetracycline responsive elements (TRE) cassette (~90 kb) at X-chromosome in U2OS cells (Lan et al., 2010), then fused KillerRed (KR), a light-stimulated ROS-inducer which can specifically produce ROS-induced DNA damage, to a tet-repressor (tetR-KR, OFF) or a transcription activator (TA-KR, ON) (Lan et al., 2014) (Figure 1). TetR-KR or TA-KR binds to the TRE cassette and induces ROS damage under hetero- or euchromatin states, respectively. How chromatin states regulate the DNA damage response processes can be examined by using this powerful method.
Figure 1. Scheme of the DTG system. A. Scheme of tetR and TA tagged KR expression in the U2OS TRE cell line. To induce ROS-mediated damage at a specific locus in the genome, we fused KR to the tetracycline repressor to induce ROS damage in a 90 kb tetracycline response element (TRE) array (totally 96 repeats) in U2OS cells. B. Expression of tetR-KR in U2OS TRE cell line.
Materials and Reagents
Equipment
Procedure
Notes
For calculation of the dose that was delivered to the KillerRed spot:
Acknowledgments
This protocol has been adapted from Lan et al. (2010) and Lan et al. (2014).
References
Article Information
Copyright
© 2014 The Authors; exclusive licensee Bio-protocol LLC.
How to cite
Wei, L., Nakajima, S., Levine, A. S. and Lan, L. (2014). Novel Method for Site-specific Induction of Oxidative DNA Damage to Study Recruitment of Repair Proteins to Heterochromatin and Euchromatin. Bio-protocol 4(11): e1140. DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.1140.
Category
Cell Biology > Cell structure > Chromosome
Molecular Biology > DNA > DNA damage and repair
Biochemistry > Other compound > Reactive oxygen species
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