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Dive into the research topics where Alessandro Vindigni is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandro Vindigni.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2015

Rad51-mediated replication fork reversal is a global response to genotoxic treatments in human cells

Ralph Zellweger; Damian Dalcher; Karun Mutreja; Matteo Berti; Jonas A. Schmid; Raquel Herrador; Alessandro Vindigni; Massimo Lopes

Genotoxic treatments in human cells consistently induce uncoupling of replication forks and their remodeling into four-way junctions by the RAD51 recombinase.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2013

Human RECQ1 promotes restart of replication forks reversed by DNA topoisomerase I inhibition

Matteo Berti; Arnab Ray Chaudhuri; Saravanabhavan Thangavel; Shivasankari Gomathinayagam; Saša Kenig; Marko Vujanovic; Federico Odreman; Timo Glatter; Simona Graziano; Ramiro Mendoza-Maldonado; Francesca Marino; Bojana Lucic; Valentina Biasin; Matthias Gstaiger; Ruedi Aebersold; Julia M. Sidorova; Raymond J. Monnat; Massimo Lopes; Alessandro Vindigni

Topoisomerase I (TOP1) inhibitors are an important class of anticancer drugs. The cytotoxicity of TOP1 inhibitors can be modulated by replication fork reversal through a process that requires poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) activity. Whether regressed forks can efficiently restart and what factors are required to restart fork progression after fork reversal are still unknown. We have combined biochemical and EM approaches with single-molecule DNA fiber analysis to identify a key role for human RECQ1 helicase in replication fork restart after TOP1 inhibition that is not shared by other human RecQ proteins. We show that the poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation activity of PARP1 stabilizes forks in the regressed state by limiting their restart by RECQ1. These studies provide new mechanistic insights into the roles of RECQ1 and PARP in DNA replication and offer molecular perspectives to potentiate chemotherapeutic regimens based on TOP1 inhibition.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2015

DNA2 drives processing and restart of reversed replication forks in human cells

Saravanabhavan Thangavel; Matteo Berti; Cosimo Pinto; Shivasankari Gomathinayagam; Marko Vujanovic; Ralph Zellweger; Hayley R. Moore; Eu Han Lee; Eric A. Hendrickson; Petr Cejka; Sheila A. Stewart; Massimo Lopes; Alessandro Vindigni

Following prolonged genotoxic stress, DNA2 and WRN functionally interact to degrade reversed replication forks and promote replication restart, thereby preventing aberrant processing of unresolved replication intermediates


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

The Human RecQ Helicases, BLM and RECQ1, Display Distinct DNA Substrate Specificities

Venkateswarlu Popuri; Csanád Z. Bachrati; Laura Muzzolini; Georgina Mosedale; Silvia Costantini; Elisa Giacomini; Ian D. Hickson; Alessandro Vindigni

RecQ helicases maintain chromosome stability by resolving a number of highly specific DNA structures that would otherwise impede the correct transmission of genetic information. Previous studies have shown that two human RecQ helicases, BLM and WRN, have very similar substrate specificities and preferentially unwind noncanonical DNA structures, such as synthetic Holliday junctions and G-quadruplex DNA. Here, we extend this analysis of BLM to include new substrates and have compared the substrate specificity of BLM with that of another human RecQ helicase, RECQ1. Our findings show that RECQ1 has a distinct substrate specificity compared with BLM. In particular, RECQ1 cannot unwind G-quadruplexes or RNA-DNA hybrid structures, even in the presence of the single-stranded binding protein, human replication protein A, that stimulates its DNA helicase activity. Moreover, RECQ1 cannot substitute for BLM in the regression of a model replication fork and is very inefficient in displacing plasmid D-loops lacking a 3′-tail. Conversely, RECQ1, but not BLM, is able to resolve immobile Holliday junction structures lacking an homologous core, even in the absence of human replication protein A. Mutagenesis studies show that the N-terminal region (residues 1–56) of RECQ1 is necessary both for protein oligomerization and for this Holliday junction disruption activity. These results suggest that the N-terminal domain or the higher order oligomer formation promoted by the N terminus is essential for the ability of RECQ1 to disrupt Holliday junctions. Collectively, our findings highlight several differences between the substrate specificities of RECQ1 and BLM (and by inference WRN) and suggest that these enzymes play nonoverlapping functions in cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Structure of the human RECQ1 helicase reveals a putative strand-separation pin

A.C.W. Pike; Binesh Shrestha; Venkateswarlu Popuri; N. Burgess-Brown; Laura Muzzolini; Silvia Costantini; Alessandro Vindigni; O. Gileadi

RecQ-like helicases, which include 5 members in the human genome, are important in maintaining genome integrity. We present a crystal structure of a truncated form of the human RECQ1 protein with Mg-ADP. The truncated protein is active in DNA fork unwinding but lacks other activities of the full-length enzyme: disruption of Holliday junctions and DNA strand annealing. The structure of human RECQ1 resembles that of Escherichia coli RecQ, with some important differences. All structural domains are conserved, including the 2 RecA-like domains and the RecQ-specific zinc-binding and winged-helix (WH) domains. However, the WH domain is positioned at a different orientation from that of the E. coli enzyme. We identify a prominent β-hairpin of the WH domain as essential for DNA strand separation, which may be analogous to DNA strand-separation features of other DNA helicases. This hairpin is significantly shorter in the E. coli enzyme and is not required for its helicase activity, suggesting that there are significant differences between the modes of action of RecQ family members.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2016

Replication stress: getting back on track.

Matteo Berti; Alessandro Vindigni

The replication-stress response enables the DNA replication machinery to overcome DNA lesions or intrinsic replication-fork obstacles, and it is essential to ensure faithful transmission of genetic information to daughter cells. Multiple replication stress–response pathways have been identified in recent years, thus raising questions about the specific and possibly redundant functions of these pathways. Here, we review the emerging mechanisms of the replication-stress response in mammalian cells and consider how they may influence the dynamics of the core DNA replication complex.


Molecular Cancer | 2011

The human RECQ1 helicase is highly expressed in glioblastoma and plays an important role in tumor cell proliferation.

Ramiro Mendoza-Maldonado; Valentina Faoro; Sailesh Bajpai; Matteo Berti; Federico Odreman; Marco Vindigni; Tamara Ius; Abdollah Ghasemian; Serena Bonin; Miran Skrap; Giorgio Stanta; Alessandro Vindigni

BackgroundRecQ helicases play an essential role in the maintenance of genome stability. In humans, loss of RecQ helicase function is linked with predisposition to cancer and/or premature ageing. Current data show that the specific depletion of the human RECQ1 helicase leads to mitotic catastrophe in cancer cells and inhibition of tumor growth in mice.ResultsHere, we show that RECQ1 is highly expressed in various types of solid tumors. However, only in the case of brain gliomas, the high expression of RECQ1 in glioblastoma tissues is paralleled by a lower expression in the control samples due to the poor expression of RECQ1 in non-dividing tissues. This conclusion is validated by immunohistochemical analysis of a tissue microarray containing 63 primary glioblastomas and 19 perilesional tissue samples, as control. We also show that acute depletion of RECQ1 by RNAi results in a significant reduction of cellular proliferation, perturbation of S-phase progression, and spontaneous γ-H2AX foci formation in T98G and U-87 glioblastoma cells. Moreover, RECQ1 depleted T98G and U-87 cells are hypersensitive to HU or temozolomide treatment.ConclusionsCollectively, these results indicate that RECQ1 has a unique and important role in the maintenance of genome integrity. Our results also suggest that RECQ1 might represent a new suitable target for anti cancer therapies aimed to arrest cell proliferation in brain gliomas.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Cell Cycle-dependent Phosphorylation of Human DNA Ligase I at the Cyclin-dependent Kinase Sites

Giovanni Ferrari; Rossella Rossi; Daniele Arosio; Alessandro Vindigni; Giuseppe Biamonti; Alessandra Montecucco

We have described previously that, during S-phase, human DNA ligase I is phosphorylated on Ser66, a casein kinase II site. Here we investigate the phosphorylation status of DNA ligase I during the cell cycle by gel shift analysis and electrospray mass spectrometry. We show that three residues (Ser51, Ser76, and Ser91), which are part of cyclin-dependent kinase sites, are phosphorylated in a cell cycle-dependent manner. Phosphorylation of Ser91 occurs at G1/S transition and depends on a cyclin binding site in the C-terminal part of the protein. This modification is required for the ensuing phosphorylation of Ser76 detectable in G2/M extracts. The substitution of serines at positions 51, 66, 76, and 91 with aspartic acid to mimic the phosphorylated enzyme hampers the association of DNA ligase I with the replication foci. We suggest that the phosphorylation of DNA ligase I and possibly other replicative enzymes is part of the mechanism that directs the disassembly of the replication machinery at the completion of S-phase.


Nature Communications | 2017

MRE11 and EXO1 nucleases degrade reversed forks and elicit MUS81-dependent fork rescue in BRCA2-deficient cells

Delphine Lemaçon; Jessica Jackson; Annabel Quinet; Joshua R. Brickner; Shan Li; Stephanie A. Yazinski; Zhongsheng You; Grzegorz Ira; Lee Zou; Nima Mosammaparast; Alessandro Vindigni

The breast cancer susceptibility proteins BRCA1 and BRCA2 have emerged as key stabilizing factors for the maintenance of replication fork integrity following replication stress. In their absence, stalled replication forks are extensively degraded by the MRE11 nuclease, leading to chemotherapeutic sensitivity. Here we report that BRCA proteins prevent nucleolytic degradation by protecting replication forks that have undergone fork reversal upon drug treatment. The unprotected regressed arms of reversed forks are the entry point for MRE11 in BRCA-deficient cells. The CtIP protein initiates MRE11-dependent degradation, which is extended by the EXO1 nuclease. Next, we show that the initial limited resection of the regressed arms establishes the substrate for MUS81 in BRCA2-deficient cells. In turn, MUS81 cleavage of regressed forks with a ssDNA tail promotes POLD3-dependent fork rescue. We propose that targeting this pathway may represent a new strategy to modulate BRCA2-deficient cancer cell response to chemotherapeutics that cause fork degradation.BRCA proteins have emerged as key stabilizing factors for the maintenance of replication forks following replication stress. Here the authors describe how reversed replication forks are degraded in the absence of BRCA2, and a MUS81 and POLD3-dependent mechanism of rescue following the withdrawal of genotoxic agent.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Human RECQ1 helicase-driven DNA unwinding, annealing, and branch migration: Insights from DNA complex structures.

A.C.W. Pike; Shivasankari Gomathinayagam; Paolo Swuec; Matteo Berti; Y. Zhang; Christina Schnecke; Francesca Marino; Frank von Delft; Ludovic Renault; Alessandro Costa; O. Gileadi; Alessandro Vindigni

Significance RecQ DNA helicases are critical enzymes for the maintenance of genome integrity. Here, we determined the first DNA complex structures, to our knowledge, of the human RECQ1 helicase. These structures provide new insight into the RecQ helicase mechanism of DNA tracking, strand separation, strand annealing, and Holliday junction (HJ) branch migration. We identified a surface region in the winged-helix domain of RECQ1 that is important for both dsDNA recognition and HJ resolution, and we used a combination of biochemical, analytical ultracentrifugation, and EM experiments to begin elucidating the molecular basis of the distinct HJ resolution activities of human RecQ helicases. RecQ helicases are a widely conserved family of ATP-dependent motors with diverse roles in nearly every aspect of bacterial and eukaryotic genome maintenance. However, the physical mechanisms by which RecQ helicases recognize and process specific DNA replication and repair intermediates are largely unknown. Here, we solved crystal structures of the human RECQ1 helicase in complexes with tailed-duplex DNA and ssDNA. The structures map the interactions of the ssDNA tail and the branch point along the helicase and Zn-binding domains, which, together with reported structures of other helicases, define the catalytic stages of helicase action. We also identify a strand-separating pin, which (uniquely in RECQ1) is buttressed by the protein dimer interface. A duplex DNA-binding surface on the C-terminal domain is shown to play a role in DNA unwinding, strand annealing, and Holliday junction (HJ) branch migration. We have combined EM and analytical ultracentrifugation approaches to show that RECQ1 can form what appears to be a flat, homotetrameric complex and propose that RECQ1 tetramers are involved in HJ recognition. This tetrameric arrangement suggests a platform for coordinated activity at the advancing and receding duplexes of an HJ during branch migration.

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Annabel Quinet

University of São Paulo

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Federico Odreman

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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Francesca Marino

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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