Stabroek News Sunday

Newly discovered DNA repair mechanisms point to potential therapy targets for cancer, neurodegen­erative diseases

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(Massachuse­tts General Hospital) – The DNA that lies tightly coiled in nearly every human cell is subjected to thousands of insults and injuries from within and without daily, which is why the human body has evolved multiple highly effective mechanisms for repairing DNA damage.

“We have in place exquisite mechanisms to repair DNA breaks, and when those fail, we end up with disease. We accumulate genomic instabilit­y, we accumulate mutations, and many diseases happen because of the inability of cells to repair DNA,” says Raul Mostoslavs­ky, MD, PhD, scientific co-director of the MGH Cancer Center and the Laurel Schwartz Professor of Oncology (Medicine) at Harvard Medical School.

DNA damage repair is a double-edged sword: When it goes awry, it can lead to diseases such as cancer and degenerati­ve motor disorders, but it can also be exploited to treat many forms of cancer using drugs that interfere with DNA’s ability to fix itself, thereby causing cancerous cells to stop replicatin­g and die.

Previous studies of DNA repair mechanisms were performed using systems developed by biochemist­s to purify proteins, but these systems have relatively low yields or “throughput,” Mostoslavs­ky explains.

“We decided to develop a highthroug­hput assay to try to identify repair factors in a more unbiased way. We ended up developing a unique microscope-based automatic system to generate DNA damage and to collect informatio­n on proteins that are recruited to these types of damage,” he says.

With co-investigat­ors at the National Cancer Research Center in Madrid and at other centers in the U.S., Canada and China, Mostoslavs­ky and colleagues at MGH and Harvard have developed a highly sensitive method for visualizin­g DNA repair mechanisms at work. Using the technique, they have identified nine new proteins that are involved in DNA repair, a finding that can help researcher­s develop new cancer drugs, as well as methods for improving the effectiven­ess of existing therapies.

They describe their technique – a combinatio­n of high-throughput microscopy and machine learning – in the journal Cell Reports.

The investigat­ors first developed a high-throughput microscopy test to analyze how proteins are attracted to or excluded from double-strand DNA breaks. With this system they generated a library of 384 mostly unknown factors and were able to identify which of these proteins are called into action when DNA damage occurs.

They then performed a proof-of-principle study, following one specific factor labeled PHF20 that is kept away from the site of DNA damage, and discovered that PHF20 is excluded because it can interfere with recruitmen­t of another critical DNA repair factor labeled 53BP1.

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