The Redox Activity of Protein Disulphide Isomerase Functions in Non-Homologous End-Joining Repair to Prevent DNA Damage.

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作者:Shadfar Sina, Farzana Fabiha, Saravanabavan Sayanthooran, Rozario Ashley M, Vidal Marta, Jagaraj Cyril Jones, Parakh Sonam, Paric Esmeralda, Yuan Kristy C, Brocardo Mariana, Whelan Donna R, Laird Angela S, Atkin Julie D
DNA damage is a serious threat to cellular viability, and it is implicated as the major cause of normal ageing. Hence, targeting DNA damage therapeutically may counteract age-related cellular dysfunction and disease, such as neurodegenerative conditions and cancer. Identifying novel DNA repair mechanisms therefore reveals new therapeutic interventions for multiple human diseases. In neurons, non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) is the only mechanism available to repair double-stranded DNA breaks (DSB), which is much more error prone than other DNA repair processes. However, there are no therapeutic interventions to enhance DNA repair in diseases affecting neurons. NHEJ is also a useful target for DNA repair-based cancer therapies to selectively kill tumour cells. Protein disulphide isomerase (PDI) participates in many diseases, but its roles in these conditions remain poorly defined. PDI exhibits both chaperone and redox-dependent oxidoreductase activity, and while primarily localised in the endoplasmic reticulum it has also been detected in other cellular locations. We describe here a novel role for PDI in DSB repair following at least two types of DNA damage. PDI functions in NHEJ, and following DNA damage, it relocates to the nucleus, where it co-localises with critical DSB repair proteins at DNA damage foci. A redox-inactive mutant of PDI lacking its two active site cysteine residues was not protective, however. Hence, the redox activity of PDI mediates DNA repair, highlighting these cysteines as targets for therapeutic intervention. The therapeutic potential of PDI was also confirmed by its protective activity in a whole organism against DNA damage induced in vivo in zebrafish. Hence, harnessing the redox function of PDI has potential as a novel therapeutic target against DSB DNA damage relevant to several human diseases.

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