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Gagan A. Pandya

J. Craig Venter Institute

Publishes on DNA Repair Mechanisms, Carcinogens and Genotoxicity Assessment, Bacillus and Francisella bacterial research. 15 papers and 465 citations.

15Publications
465Total Citations

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1,<i>N</i><sup>6</sup>-Ethenodeoxyadenosine, a DNA Adduct Highly Mutagenic in Mammalian Cells
Gagan A. Pandya, Masaaki Moriya|Biochemistry|1996
Cited by 179

1,N6-Ethenodeoxyadenosine (epsilon dA) is one of four exocyclic DNA adducts produced by chloroethylene oxide and chloroacetaldehyde, reactive metabolites of vinyl chloride, a human carcinogen. epsilon dA has also been detected in DNA of the liver of humans and untreated animals, suggesting its formation from endogenous sources. The mutagenic potential of epsilon dA was studied using a single-stranded shuttle vector system in several E. coli strains and in simian kidney cells (COS7). This vector system enables quantitative analysis of translesional synthesis past a site-specifically placed DNA adduct in both hosts owing to the lack of the complementary strand. In experiments with five strains of E. coli, a very limited number of targeted mutations (one epsilon dA-->T, one epsilon dA-->dC, and two epsilon dA-->single base deletion) were observed among 756 transformants in hosts preirradiated with UV; no targeted mutations were observed among 563 transformants in nonirradiated hosts. These results indicate that nonmutagenic base pairings of epsilon dA:T are the almost exclusive events in E. coli. In COS7 cells, the frequency of targeted mutations was 70%, consisting of epsilon dA-->dG (63%), epsilon dA-->T (6%), and epsilon dA-->dC (1%), indicating that the insertion of dCMP opposite the adduct is predominant. When compared with the results for 3,N4-ethenodeoxycytidine (epsilon dC), which was studied previously in the same system [Moriya et al. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 91, 11899-11903], the results of this study indicate that the intrinsic mutagenic potency of epsilon dA is comparable to that of epsilon dC in mammalian cells.

Mutagenesis induced by a single 1,N6-ethenodeoxyadenosine adduct in human cells.
Cited by 132

To study the genotoxic properties of 1,N6-ethenodeoxyadenosine (epsilondA) in human cells, a novel site-specific mutagenesis approach was developed, in which a single DNA adduct was uniquely placed in either strand of a shuttle plasmid vector. The analysis of progeny plasmid derived from the modified strand shows that epsilondA, when incorporated into the position of the second A of 5'-CAA (codon 61 of the ras gene), is mutagenic in human cells, inducing A-->T, A-->G, and A-->C mutations. The efficient induction of A-->T transversions in experiments using modified double- and singlestranded DNA substrates supports the hypothesis that A:T-->T:A transversions in human and animal tumors induced by vinyl compounds reflect misinsertion of dAMP opposite this adduct. Mutagenic events were similar when the adduct was incorporated into either the leading or the lagging strand. EpsilondA was more mutagenic than 8-oxodeoxyguanosine, which induced targeted G-->T transversions in HeLa cells. In Escherichia coli, epsilondA did not significantly miscode (<0.27%) even in the presence of induced SOS functions.

Whole genome single nucleotide polymorphism based phylogeny of Francisella tularensis and its application to the development of a strain typing assay
Cited by 52Open Access

BACKGROUND: A low genetic diversity in Francisella tularensis has been documented. Current DNA based genotyping methods for typing F. tularensis offer a limited and varying degree of subspecies, clade and strain level discrimination power. Whole genome sequencing is the most accurate and reliable method to identify, type and determine phylogenetic relationships among strains of a species. However, lower cost typing schemes are necessary in order to enable typing of hundreds or even thousands of isolates. RESULTS: We have generated a high-resolution phylogenetic tree from 40 Francisella isolates, including 13 F. tularensis subspecies holarctica (type B) strains, 26 F. tularensis subsp. tularensis (type A) strains and a single F. novicida strain. The tree was generated from global multi-strain single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data collected using a set of six Affymetrix GeneChip resequencing arrays with the non-repetitive portion of LVS (type B) as the reference sequence complemented with unique sequences of SCHU S4 (type A). Global SNP based phylogenetic clustering was able to resolve all non-related strains. The phylogenetic tree was used to guide the selection of informative SNPs specific to major nodes in the tree for development of a genotyping assay for identification of F. tularensis subspecies and clades. We designed and validated an assay that uses these SNPs to accurately genotype 39 additional F. tularensis strains as type A (A1, A2, A1a or A1b) or type B (B1 or B2). CONCLUSION: Whole-genome SNP based clustering was shown to accurately identify SNPs for differentiation of F. tularensis subspecies and clades, emphasizing the potential power and utility of this methodology for selecting SNPs for typing of F. tularensis to the strain level. Additionally, whole genome sequence based SNP information gained from a representative population of strains may be used to perform evolutionary or phylogenetic comparisons of strains, or selection of unique strains for whole-genome sequencing projects.

A bioinformatic filter for improved base-call accuracy and polymorphism detection using the Affymetrix GeneChip® whole-genome resequencing platform
Gagan A. Pandya, Michael H. Holmes, Sirisha Sunkara et al.|Nucleic Acids Research|2007
Cited by 18Open Access

DNA resequencing arrays enable rapid acquisition of high-quality sequence data. This technology represents a promising platform for rapid high-resolution genotyping of microorganisms. Traditional array-based resequencing methods have relied on the use of specific PCR-amplified fragments from the query samples as hybridization targets. While this specificity in the target DNA population reduces the potential for artifacts caused by cross-hybridization, the subsampling of the query genome limits the sequence coverage that can be obtained and therefore reduces the technique's resolution as a genotyping method. We have developed and validated an Affymetrix Inc. GeneChip(R) array-based, whole-genome resequencing platform for Francisella tularensis, the causative agent of tularemia. A set of bioinformatic filters that targeted systematic base-calling errors caused by cross-hybridization between the whole-genome sample and the array probes and by deletions in the sample DNA relative to the chip reference sequence were developed. Our approach eliminated 91% of the false-positive single-nucleotide polymorphism calls identified in the SCHU S4 query sample, at the cost of 10.7% of the true positives, yielding a total base-calling accuracy of 99.992%.

<i>Escherichia coli</i> Responses to a Single DNA Adduct
Gagan A. Pandya, In‐Young Yang, Arthur P. Grollman et al.|Journal of Bacteriology|2000
Cited by 17Open Access

To study the mechanisms by which Escherichia coli modulates the genotoxic effects of DNA damage, a novel system has been developed which permits quantitative measurements of various E. coli pathways involved in mutagenesis and DNA repair. Events measured include fidelity and efficiency of translesion DNA synthesis, excision repair, and recombination repair. Our strategy involves heteroduplex plasmid DNA bearing a single site-specific DNA adduct and several mismatched regions. The plasmid replicates in a mismatch repair-deficient host with the mismatches serving as strand-specific markers. Analysis of progeny plasmid DNA for linkage of the strand-specific markers identifies the pathway from which the plasmid is derived. Using this approach, a single 1, N(6)-ethenodeoxyadenosine adduct was shown to be repaired inefficiently by excision repair, to inhibit DNA synthesis by approximately 80 to 90%, and to direct the incorporation of correct dTMP opposite this adduct. This approach is especially useful in analyzing the damage avoidance-tolerance mechanisms. Our results also show that (i) progeny derived from the damage avoidance-tolerance pathway(s) accounts for more than 15% of all progeny; (ii) this pathway(s) requires functional recA, recF, recO, and recR genes, suggesting the mechanism to be daughter strand gap repair; (iii) the ruvABC genes or the recG gene is also required; and (iv) the RecG pathway appears to be more active than the RuvABC pathway. Based on these results, the mechanism of the damage avoidance-tolerance pathway is discussed.