C

Cecilia Ström

Uppsala University

Publishes on DNA Repair Mechanisms, PARP inhibition in cancer therapy, Social and Educational Sciences. 42 papers and 1.4k citations.

42Publications
1.4kTotal Citations

Is this you? Claim your profile.

Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.

Top publicationsby citations

Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) is not involved in base excision repair but PARP inhibition traps a single-strand intermediate
Cecilia Ström, Fredrik Johansson, Mathias Uhlén et al.|Nucleic Acids Research|2010
Cited by 298Open Access

Base excision repair (BER) represents the most important repair pathway of endogenous DNA lesions. Initially, a base damage is recognized, excised and a DNA single-strand break (SSB) intermediate forms. The SSB is then ligated, a process that employs proteins also involved in SSB repair, e.g. XRCC1, Ligase III and possibly PARP1. Here, we confirm the role of XRCC1 and PARP in direct SSB repair. Interestingly, we uncover a synthetic lethality between XRCC1 deficiency and PARP inhibition. We also treated cells with alkylating agent dimethyl sulfate (DMS) and monitored the SSB intermediates formed during BER. DMS-induced SSBs were quickly repaired in wild-type cells; while a rapid accumulation of SSBs was observed in cells where post-incision repair was blocked by a PARP inhibitor or by XRCC1 deficiency (EM9 cells). Interestingly, DMS-induced SSBs did not accumulate in PARP1 siRNA depleted cells, demonstrating that PARP1 is not required for efficient completion of BER. Based on these results we suggest no immediate role for PARP1 in BER, but that PARP inhibitors trap PARP on the SSB intermediate formed during BER. Unexpectedly, addition of PARP inhibitor 2 h after DMS treatment still increased SSB levels indicating ongoing repair even at this late time point.

Determination of Micellar Aggregation Numbers in Dilute Surfactant Systems with the Fluorescence Quenching Method.
Per Hansson, Bengt Jönsson, Cecilia Ström et al.|The Journal of Physical Chemistry B|2000
Cited by 97

This work addresses the problem of determining micellar aggregation numbers for dilute ionic surfactant systems by means of the time-resolved fluorescence quenching method. We argue that the use of quenchers that are themselves surfactants gives us two advantages. First, the altering of the micelles caused by the solubilization of quencher molecules is minimized. Second, the distribution of the quencher between the micelles and the aqueous subphase can be obtained. The latter point is particularly important for the case of dilute micellar systems and when the micelles are adsorbed at interfaces or associated with polymers. We describe a method to obtain the partitioning of the quencher for various surfactant/quencher combinations. The method is based on a detailed thermodynamic model of mixed micelles supported by Poisson−Boltzmann cell model calculations. It is shown that ideal mixing of surfactant and quencher in the micelles simplifies the analysis of effects related to polydispersity and probe distribution among the micelles. The method is applied to quaternary ammonium surfactants, both mono- and divalent, with various chain lengths, using the corresponding alkyl pyridinium ions as quenchers. Aggregation numbers at concentrations close to the critical micelle concentration (cmc) are presented and discussed.

The PARP inhibitor Olaparib disrupts base excision repair of 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine lesions
Cited by 85Open Access

Decitabine (5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine, 5-azadC) is used in the treatment of Myelodysplatic syndrome (MDS) and Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML). Its mechanism of action is thought to involve reactivation of genes implicated in differentiation and transformation, as well as induction of DNA damage by trapping DNA methyltranferases (DNMT) to DNA. We demonstrate for the first time that base excision repair (BER) recognizes 5-azadC-induced lesions in DNA and mediates repair. We find that BER (XRCC1) deficient cells are sensitive to 5-azadC and display an increased amount of DNA single- and double-strand breaks. The XRCC1 protein co-localizes with DNMT1 foci after 5-azadC treatment, suggesting a novel and specific role of XRCC1 in the repair of trapped DNMT1. 5-azadC-induced DNMT foci persist in XRCC1 defective cells, demonstrating a role for XRCC1 in repair of 5-azadC-induced DNA lesions. Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibition prevents XRCC1 relocation to DNA damage sites, disrupts XRCC1-DNMT1 co-localization and thereby efficient BER. In a panel of AML cell lines, combining 5-azadC and Olaparib cause synthetic lethality. These data suggest that PARP inhibitors can be used in combination with 5-azadC to improve treatment of MDS and AML.