Abstract

Dyshomeostasis of transition metals iron and copper as well as accumulation of oxidative DNA damage have been implicated in multitude of human neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease. These metals oxidize DNA bases by generating reactive oxygen species. Most oxidized bases in mammalian genomes are repaired via the base excision repair pathway, initiated with one of four major DNA glycosylases: NTH1 or OGG1 (of the Nth family) or NEIL1 or NEIL2 (of the Nei family). Here we show that Fe(II/III) and Cu(II) at physiological levels bind to NEIL1 and NEIL2 to alter their secondary structure and strongly inhibit repair of mutagenic 5-hydroxyuracil, a common cytosine oxidation product, both in vitro and in neuroblastoma (SH-SY5Y) cell extract by affecting the base excision and AP lyase activities of NEILs. The specificity of iron/copper inhibition of NEILs is indicated by a lack of similar inhibition of OGG1, which also indicated that the inhibition is due to metal binding to the enzymes and not DNA. Fluorescence and surface plasmon resonance studies show submicromolar binding of copper/iron to NEILs but not OGG1. Furthermore, Fe(II) inhibits the interaction of NEIL1 with downstream base excision repair proteins DNA polymerase beta and flap endonuclease-1 by 4-6-fold. These results indicate that iron/copper overload in the neurodegenerative diseases could act as a double-edged sword by both increasing oxidative genome damage and preventing their repair. Interestingly, specific chelators, including the natural chemopreventive compound curcumin, reverse the inhibition of NEILs both in vitro and in cells, suggesting their therapeutic potential.

Highlights

  • Dyshomeostasis of transition metals iron and copper as well as accumulation of oxidative DNA damage have been implicated in multitude of human neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease

  • OGG1 and NTH1 carry out ␤-elimination, generating 3Ј-deoxyribose phosphate, which is subsequently removed by AP-endonuclease (APE1), whereas NEIL1 and NEIL2 with ␤␦-elimination lyase activity generate 3Ј-P, which is removed by polynucleotide kinase (PNK)

  • Inhibition of NEILs but Not OGG1 by Iron and Copper—We examined the effect of CuCl2 (1 nM to 500 nM), FeCl3, and FeSO4 (100 nM to 10 ␮M)

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Summary

Introduction

Dyshomeostasis of transition metals iron and copper as well as accumulation of oxidative DNA damage have been implicated in multitude of human neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease. 50 fmol each of NEIL1 (a), NEIL2 (b), or OGG1 (c) was incubated with the substrate (upper panel) and metals (copper, 0.1 or 0.5 ␮M; iron, 1 or 10 ␮M) in the presence of 100 mM NaBH4 at 37 °C for 45 min and analyzed by 12% SDS-PAGE.

Results
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