Human Ogg1, a protein involved in the repair of 8-oxoguanine, is inhibited by nitric oxide.

Meeta Jaiswal(Kyushu University), Nicholas F. LaRusso(Mayo Clinic), Nenichi Nishioka(Kyushu University), Yusaku Nakabeppu, Gregory J. Gores(Mayo Clinic)
PubMed
September 1, 2001
Cited by 177

Abstract

NO-mediated inhibition of base excision DNA repair may potentiate oxidativeDNA damage in cells and could be relevant to carcinogenesis associated with chronic inflammation. Because 8-oxoguanine, a ubiquitous oxidative DNA lesion, is repaired predominantly by human 8-oxoguanine glycosylase (hOgg1), our aim was to determine whether NO directly inhibits its repair activity. Neither induction of NO-generating enzyme inducible NO synthase nor treatment with S-nitroso-N-acetyl-D-L-pencillamine altered expression of hOgg1 in a human cholangiocarcinoma cell line (KMBC). In contrast, both treatments completely inhibited activity of hOgg1 immunoprecipitated from KMBC cells overexpressing hOgg1 and in a cell-free system. Both NO and peroxynitrite were capable of inhibiting hOgg1 activity. Inhibition of hOgg1 protein was characterized by formation of S-nitrosothiol adducts and loss/ejection of zinc ions. Our data indicate that NO, an inflammatory mediator, directly inhibits a key base excision repair enzyme (hOgg1) responsible for base excision repair of 8-oxoguanine. These data support the concept that NO-mediated inhibition of DNA contributes to the mutagenic environment of chronic inflammation.


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