National Repository of Grey Literature 26 records found  previous6 - 15nextend  jump to record: Search took 0.01 seconds. 
RTEL1 as a novel suppressor of homologous recombination
Žítek, Ondřej ; chevelev, Igor (advisor) ; Kratochvíl, Lukáš (referee)
Regulator of telomere elongation helicase 1 (RTEL1) is a DNA helicase crucial for regulation of telomere length in mice while its loss has been associated with shortened telomere length, chromosome breaks, and translocations. Moreover, RTEL1 is an important member of the DNA double-strand break-repair (DSBR) pathway. It maintains genome stability directly by suppressing homologous recombination through disassembling D loop recombination intermediates during DNA repair. Antirecombinase properties of RTEL1 make it the key protein required in meiosis and mitosis to execute non-crossover way of DSBR by promoting synthesis-dependent strand annealing (SDSA). Defect in any of these functions might lead to glioma predisposition in human.
Chromosomal damage and DNA repair capacity in blood lymphocytes as transient markers in carcinogenesis.
Kroupa, Michal ; Vodička, Pavel (advisor) ; Štětina, Rudolf (referee)
Recent knowledge suggests that the onset of cancer is modulated by the interplay of internal and external environmental factors along with numerous gene variants. Structural chromsomal aberrations in peripheral blood lymphocytes are considered as biomarkers of effect of genotoxic carcinogens and reflect elevated risk of cancer. Incomplete or deficient repair of double-strand breaks in DNA underlie chromosomal aberrations and the measurement of cytogenetic alterations may reflect interindividual differences in the response towards the mutagen. In this study the expected deficiences in the DNA repair capacity have been determined in incident oncological patients with breast, colorectal and urogenital cancers. The determination of chromosomal aberrations have been supplemented by the measurement of variants in genes involved in double-strand breaks repair (XRCC3, rs861539; RAD54L, rs1048771). Methodologically, we employed conventional cytogenetic analysis, cytogenetic analysis following the induction of chromocomal damage by bleomycin ("Challenge assay"), TaqMan discrimination analysis for the detection of allelic variants and statistical analyses. By using these methods we did not observe statistically signifiant differences either in chromosomal breaks (p=0,354) or in a percentage of cells with...
Mechanisms of DNA repair in the moss Physcomitrella patens
Holá, Marcela ; Angelis, Karel (advisor) ; Bříza, Jindřich (referee) ; Fajkus, Jiří (referee)
Over the course of an organism's life, its genome is exposed to endogenous and exogenous chemical, physical and biological agents - genotoxins. These genotoxins alter its basic structural components - sugar residues, phosphodiester bonds, and nitrogenous bases. Organisms have therefore evolved a plethora of different strategies to both repair DNA lesions and maintain genomic stability. These DNA repair pathways are linked with several other cell pathways, including chromatin remodelling, DNA replication, transcription, cell cycle control, apoptosis - programmed cell death (PCD), thereby providing a coordinated cellular response to DNA damage. Biochemical mechanisms of DNA repair are relatively well understood in yeast and mammals, however, far less so in plants. While these repair mechanisms are evolutionary conserved, significant differences still remain. Therefore, further investigation is required. This thesis summarises the introduction of a novel plant model - the moss, Physcomitrella patens (Physcomitrella). As a haploid gametophyte with unique characteristics of high frequency of homologous recombination (HR), and apical growth of filaments, it is an ideal organism to study DNA repair in plants. Previous research on Physcomitrella regarding mechanisms of DNA lesion repair induced by...
The role of DNA repair mechanisms in the pathogenesis of myelodysplastic syndrome.
Válka, Jan ; Čermák, Jaroslav (advisor) ; Pospíšilová, Dagmar (referee) ; Penka, Miroslav (referee)
Background: The high incidence of mutations and cytogenetic abnormalities in patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) suggests the involvement of DNA repair mechanism defects in the pathogenesis of this disorder. The first part of this work was focused on monitoring of gene expression of DNA repair genes in MDS patients and on their alterations during disease progression. In the second part, next generation sequencing was used to detect single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and mutations in DNA repair genes and their possible association with MDS development was evaluated. Methods: Expression profiling of 84 DNA repair genes was performed on bone marrow CD34+ cells of patients with MDS. Screening cohort consisted of 28 patients and expression of selected genes was further validated on larger cohort of 122 patients with all subtypes of MDS. Paired samples were used for monitoring of RAD51 and XRCC2 gene expression during disease progression. Immunohistochemical staining for RAD51 recombinase protein was done on samples acquired by trephine-biopsy. Targeted enrichment resequencing of exonic parts of 84 DNA repair genes was performed on the screening cohort of MDS patients. Real-time PCR was used for genotyping of selected SNPs in the population study. Results: RAD51 and XRCC2 genes showed...
Role of RAD18 in ubiquitin signaling at DNA double-strand breaks
Palek, Matouš ; Macůrek, Libor (advisor) ; Čermák, Lukáš (referee)
RAD18 is an E3 ubiquitin ligase that prevents the replication forks from collapsing caused by damaged DNA. As an important factor controlling replication, its dysregulation was shown to be associated with some human tumours. However, the clinical relevance of this finding is unknown. The aim of the thesis was evaluation of selected RAD18 variants that had been identified in breast and ovarian cancer patients. This work revealed functional defects of RAD18 variants not only in replication fork protection but also in repair of DNA double-strand breaks. This unconventional role of RAD18 is known to be dependent on upstream ubiquitination events, however, its contribution to the repair per se is not understood. This work aimed to elucidate the function of RAD18 in DNA double-strand break repair by homologous recombination focusing especially on its relationship with 53BP1. Data presented here show that RAD18 effectively disrupts 53BP1 accumulation in the repair foci by competition for the same binding partner and thus promotes resection of DNA ends. This antagonistic function of RAD18 is restricted both spatially (to the vicinity of the repair centre) and temporarily (to S phase). Moreover, it seems to be regulated by existence of RAD18 in two distinct complexes. Potential models for this regulation...
The role of DNA repair pathways in ovarian cancer therapy response
Vallušová, Dominika ; Opattová, Alena (advisor) ; Rössner, Pavel (referee)
Ovarian cancer is serious and one of the most common gynecologic cancers. Carboplatin is the therapeutic agent of the first choice in the ovarian cancer therapy. However, after the primary therapeutic response to carboplatin, the relapse of the disease may occur with developed resistance to carboplatin. Chemoresistance and insufficient therapy response are considered to be the reason of the high mortality rate of ovarian cancer. The DNA damage response pathways play an important role in the therapeutic response and chemoresistance development. Restoration of homologous recombination function in cancers is the key mechanism of resistance development to platinum agents. Based on this knowledge, we formed our hypothesis, that the inhibition of homologous recombination could increase the sensibility to carboplatin. The main goal of this thesis was to define the role of double-strand breaks repair in response to chemotherapy of ovarian cancer. Protein MRE11 is part of the MRN complex, that participates in double-strand breaks repair. Using mirin as a pharmaceutic inhibitor of MRE11 we were aiming to determine the impact of homologous recombination on the effect of carboplatin and its role in resistant development to carboplatin. In the practical part of the thesis, we described the association between...
The functional in vitro analysis of the BRCA1alternative splicing variants
Ševčík, Jan ; Kleibl, Zdeněk (advisor) ; Stopka, Tomáš (referee) ; Macůrek, Libor (referee)
BACKGROUND: The inactivation of the tumor suppressor gene BRCA1 is a predisposing factor for a breast/ovarian cancer development. Formation of cancer-specific alternative splicing variants with aberrant biological properties can represent additional mechanism decreasing the overall BRCA1 activity in DNA double strand break (DDSB) repair. In this study, we analyzed BRCA1 alternative splicing variants BRCA114-15 and 17-19 ascertained previously during the screening of high-risk breast cancer individuals. METHODS: We established a stable MCF-7 cell line-based model system for an in vitro analysis of BRCA1 variants. Using this system, we analyzed the impact of BRCA114-15 and 17-19 variants on DNA repair kinetics using comet assay and confocal immunomicroscopy. The capacity of DNA repair was assessed directly by an in vitro NHEJ assay and indirectly by a mitomycin C sensitivity test. The proliferation activities were determined by a clonogenic assay and growth curves. RESULTS: Overexpression of BRCA114-15 and 17-19 increases the endogenous level of DNA damage, slows down the DDSB repair, and decelerates the initial phase of radiation-induced foci formation and prolongs their persistence. Moreover, BRCA114-15 and 17-19 differentially influence the activity of HR and NHEJ and sensitivity of MCF-7 cells to ionizing...
The role of DNA repair mechanisms in the pathogenesis of myelodysplastic syndrome.
Válka, Jan ; Čermák, Jaroslav (advisor) ; Pospíšilová, Dagmar (referee) ; Penka, Miroslav (referee)
Background: The high incidence of mutations and cytogenetic abnormalities in patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) suggests the involvement of DNA repair mechanism defects in the pathogenesis of this disorder. The first part of this work was focused on monitoring of gene expression of DNA repair genes in MDS patients and on their alterations during disease progression. In the second part, next generation sequencing was used to detect single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and mutations in DNA repair genes and their possible association with MDS development was evaluated. Methods: Expression profiling of 84 DNA repair genes was performed on bone marrow CD34+ cells of patients with MDS. Screening cohort consisted of 28 patients and expression of selected genes was further validated on larger cohort of 122 patients with all subtypes of MDS. Paired samples were used for monitoring of RAD51 and XRCC2 gene expression during disease progression. Immunohistochemical staining for RAD51 recombinase protein was done on samples acquired by trephine-biopsy. Targeted enrichment resequencing of exonic parts of 84 DNA repair genes was performed on the screening cohort of MDS patients. Real-time PCR was used for genotyping of selected SNPs in the population study. Results: RAD51 and XRCC2 genes showed...
BopN function in the Bordetella type III secretion system
Kincová, Veronika ; Kamanová, Jana (advisor) ; Večerek, Branislav (referee)
Species of the Bordetella genus cause the highly contagious whooping cough disease in humans (B. pertussis, B. parapertussis) and related respiratory diseases in other mammals (B. bronchiseptica, B. parapertussis). One of the virulence systems of Bordetellae is the type III secretion system (T3SS) employed for translocation of effector proteins directly from bacterial cytosol into the cytosol of host cells. The T3SS protein BopN protein has been categorized as a Bordetella effector protein. Nevertheless, the homologous proteins in other gram-negative bacteria function in establishing the secretion hierarchy through T3SS and some of them block T3SS secretion in high calcium environments before bacteria-host cell contact has been established. In this thesis I examined the function of the BopN protein and the role of calcium ions in T3SS activity of B. bronchiseptica. Two independent methods have been used for determination of T3SS secretion activity. Addition of 2 mM calcium ions into bacterial media decreased secretion of the T3SS reporter, while no such effect was observed in a B. bronchiseptica strain lacking the bopN gene. Mass spectrometry data confirmed the inhibition of T3SS activity in the presence of calcium ions. Enhanced calcium levels resulted in decreased mobilization and secretion of...
DNA damage response in mammalian oocytes
Vachová, Veronika ; Šolc, Petr (advisor) ; Nevoral, Jan (referee)
During early embryonic development oocytes are arrested in prophase I of the first meiotic division, in which they can persist for years. After reaching sexual maturity and the luteinizing hormon surge resumption of meiosis and meiotic maturation occur. Oocytes are arrested again at metaphase of the second meiotic division. At this stage they are ovulated and waiting for a fertilisation. Oocytes are during their development exposed to factors that cause DNA damage, of which DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are the most serious threat. The maintaining of genome integrity is crucial for quality of oocytes, fertility and proper embryonic development. The mechanism of the oocyte response to DSBs presence is not fully understood and it seems to differ from somatic cells. We assume that DSBs are repaired during meiotic maturation probably by a mechanism of homologous recombination (HR). In this thesis we focuse on essencial recombinase RAD51, which participates in the repair by HR. We found that RAD51 inhibition leads to an increase of segregation errors in anaphase I. Using high resolution live cell imaging we observed chromosomal fragments and anaphase bridges. Immunofluorescence detection of DSBs-marker γH2AX showed increased amount of DSBs in prophase I and MII stage after RAD51 inhibition. Our data...

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