David B. Busch
Armed Forces Institute of Pathology
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Featured researches published by David B. Busch.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001
John M. Graham; Kwame Anyane-Yeboa; Anja Raams; Esther Appeldoorn; Wim J. Kleijer; Victor H. Garritsen; David B. Busch; Terri G. Edersheim; Nicolaas G. J. Jaspers
Cerebro-oculo-facio-skeletal (COFS) syndrome is a recessively inherited rapidly progressive neurologic disorder leading to brain atrophy, with calcifications, cataracts, microcornea, optic atrophy, progressive joint contractures, and growth failure. Cockayne syndrome (CS) is a recessively inherited neurodegenerative disorder characterized by low to normal birth weight, growth failure, brain dysmyelination with calcium deposits, cutaneous photosensitivity, pigmentary retinopathy and/or cataracts, and sensorineural hearing loss. Cultured CS cells are hypersensitive to UV radiation, because of impaired nucleotide-excision repair (NER) of UV-induced damage in actively transcribed DNA, whereas global genome NER is unaffected. The abnormalities in CS are caused by mutated CSA or CSB genes. Another class of patients with CS symptoms have mutations in the XPB, XPD, or XPG genes, which result in UV hypersensitivity as well as defective global NER; such patients may concurrently have clinical features of another NER syndrome, xeroderma pigmentosum (XP). Clinically observed similarities between COFS syndrome and CS have been followed by discoveries of cases of COFS syndrome that are associated with mutations in the XPG and CSB genes. Here we report the first involvement of the XPD gene in a new case of UV-sensitive COFS syndrome, with heterozygous substitutions-a R616W null mutation (previously seen in patients in XP complementation group D) and a unique D681N mutation-demonstrating that a third gene can be involved in COFS syndrome. We propose that COFS syndrome be included within the already known spectrum of NER disorders: XP, CS, and trichothiodystrophy. We predict that future patients with COFS syndrome will be found to have mutations in the CSA or XPB genes, and we document successful use of DNA repair for prenatal diagnosis in triplet and singleton pregnancies at risk for COFS syndrome. This result strongly underlines the need for screening of patients with COFS syndrome, for either UV sensitivity or DNA-repair abnormalities.
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2008
Hiroki Inui; Kyu Seon Oh; Carine Nadem; Takahiro Ueda; Sikandar G. Khan; Ahmet Metin; Engin Gozukara; Steffen Emmert; Hanoch Slor; David B. Busch; Carl C. Baker; John J. DiGiovanna; Deborah Tamura; Cornelia S. Seitz; Alexei Gratchev; Wen Hao Wu; Kee Yang Chung; Hye Jin Chung; Esther Azizi; Roger Woodgate; Thomas D. Schneider; Kenneth H. Kraemer
Xeroderma pigmentosum-variant (XP-V) patients have sun sensitivity and increased skin cancer risk. Their cells have normal nucleotide excision repair, but have defects in the POLH gene encoding an error-prone polymerase, DNA polymerase eta (pol eta). To survey the molecular basis of XP-V worldwide, we measured pol eta protein in skin fibroblasts from putative XP-V patients (aged 8-66 years) from 10 families in North America, Turkey, Israel, Germany, and Korea. Pol eta was undetectable in cells from patients in eight families, whereas two showed faint bands. DNA sequencing identified 10 different POLH mutations. There were two splicing, one nonsense, five frameshift (3 deletion and 2 insertion), and two missense mutations. Nine of these mutations involved the catalytic domain. Although affected siblings had similar clinical features, the relation between the clinical features and the mutations was not clear. POLH mRNA levels were normal or reduced by 50% in three cell strains with undetectable levels of pol eta protein, indicating that nonsense-mediated message decay was limited. We found a wide spectrum of mutations in the POLH gene among XP-V patients in different countries, suggesting that many of these mutations arose independently.
Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis | 1997
Andrew R. Collins; David L. Mitchell; Annalisa Zunino; Jan de Wit; David B. Busch
Rodent UV‐sensitive mutant cell lines of complementation groups 6 and 8 are the genetic counterparts of human Cockayne syndrome CS‐B and CS‐A, respectively. The original mutant in this group, UV61, was described as defective in cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer removal after high doses of UV. We have examined the responses of several cell lines from group 6 to low doses of UV irradiation, and find that these mutants have wild‐type capacity for DNA repair as indicated by incision, cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer, and (6‐4) photoproduct removal. ERCC6, the product of the gene defective in CS‐B and group 6 mutants, is implicated in the regulation of repair of actively transcribed genes in Cockaynesyndrome; however, this protein clearly is not required for the processing of low levels of damage in CHO cells, which occurs remarkably efficiently, 40–50% of dimers being removed in both wild‐type and group 6 mutants in 5 hours following 0.1 Jm‐2 of UV. The group 8 mutant cell line US31, on the other hand, is very deficient in repair of UV damage, showing a more extreme phenotype than is seen in the corresponding human syndrome CS‐A. In both complementation groups, expression of mutations in a gene involved in regulation of DNA repair takes very different forms in human and rodent cells. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 29:152–160, 1997.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2004
John M. Graham; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; William B. Dobyns; Elizabeth Roeder; David B. Busch
Children born with the findings of microcephaly, cataracts and microcornea can result not only from a prenatal viral infection, but also from an autosomal recessive Mendelian disorders. We present three pairs of affected siblings with MICRO syndrome, who were born with congenital microcephaly, microcornea, and cataracts. MICRO syndrome is an autosomal recessive syndrome consisting of congenital microcephaly, cortical dysplasia, microcornea, cataracts, optic atrophy, severe mental retardation, hypotonic diplegia, and hypogenitalism. At birth, MICRO syndrome resembles Cerebro‐Oculo‐Facio‐Skeletal (COFS) syndrome, but it differs in the lack of the rapidly progressive neurologic features leading to severe brain atrophy with calcifications. Patients with MICRO syndrome manifest frontal cortical dysplasia, hypoplasia of the corpus callosum, cortical blindness with optic atrophy, profound mental retardation, and progressive joint contractures with growth failure. COFS syndrome shares also many clinical and cellular similarities with Cockayne syndrome (CS), and cultured cells in both conditions demonstrate hypersensitivity to ultraviolet (UV) radiation due to impaired nucleotide excision repair (NER). NER studies in cultured fibroblasts from MICRO patients give normal results, so MICRO syndrome should be considered in children with features resembling COFS syndrome and CS, but who have normal NER. MICRO should be distinguished from other similar clinical disorders with normal NER by the presence of significant visual impairment and cortical blindness despite early surgery for congenital cataracts, frontal polymicrogyria, thin corpus callosum, and cortical atrophy by MRI.
Mutation Research-dna Repair | 1996
David B. Busch; Małlgorzata Z. Zdzienicka; A.T. Natarajan; Nigel J. Jones; Wilhemina J.I. Overkamp; Andrew R. Collins; David L. Mitchell; Miria Stefanini; Elena Botta; Roberta Bliss Albert; Nan Liu; Deborah A. White; Alain J. van Gool
A new mitomycin C (MMC)-sensitive rodent line, UV40, has been identified in the collection of ultraviolet light- (UV-) sensitive mutants of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells isolated at the previous Facility for Automated Experiments in Cell Biology (FAECB). It was isolated from an UV mutant hunt using mutagenesis of AA8 cells with the DNA intercalating frameshift mutagen ICR170. It is complemented by CHO-UV-1, irsl, irs3, irslSF, MC5, V-C8 and V-H4 with respect to its MMC sensitivity based on cell survival. Despite having approx. 4 X normal UV sensitivity and increased sensitivity to UV inhibition of DNA replication, it has near-normal incision kinetics of UV irradiated DNA, and normal (6-4) photoproducts removal. It also is not hypermutable by UV, and shows near normal levels of UV inhibition of RNA synthesis. UV40 also has approx. 11 x .10 x .5 x and 2 x AA8 sensitivity to MMC, ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS), methyl methanesulfonate (MMS), and X-rays, respectively. Thus, its defect apparently does not involve nucleotide excision repair but rather another process, possibly in replicating past lesions. The spontaneous chromosomal aberration frequency is elevated to 20% in UV40, and the baseline frequency of sister chromatid exchange is also approximately 4-fold increased. The phenotype of UV40 appears to differ from all other rodent mutants that have so far been described.
Mutation Research-dna Repair | 1997
David B. Busch; Hanneke Van Vuuren; Jan de Wit; Andrew R. Collins; Małgorzata Z. Zdzienicka; David L. Mitchell; Kerry W. Brookman; Miria Stefanini; Roberta Riboni; Roberta Bliss Albert; Alain J. van Gool; Jan H.J. Hoeijmakers
Rodent ultraviolet light (UV)-sensitive mutant cells in complementation groups (CGs) 1 and 4 normally are known for their extraordinary (approximately 80-100 x) sensitivity to mitomycin C (MMC), although some CG1 mutants with reduced MMC sensitivity were previously reported (Stefanini et al. (1987) Cytotechnology 1, 91). We report here new CG1 and CG4 mutants with only 1.6-10 x wild-type MMC sensitivity despite low unscheduled DNA synthesis (UDS) levels. Mutant UV140, in UV CG4, has approximately 3.8 x the UV sensitivity of parental line AA8, approximately 1.6 x wild-type MMC sensitivity, wild-type X-ray and ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) sensitivity, and is only slightly (approximately 1.4 x) hypermutable to 8-azaadenine resistance by UV light. It has moderately decreased incision of UV-damaged DNA, has moderately decreased removal of (6-4) photoproducts, and is profoundly deficient in UDS after UV. After UV, it shows abnormally decreased DNA synthesis and persistently decreased RNA synthesis. In addition a cell-free extract of this mutant displays strongly reduced nucleotide excision repair synthesis using DNA treated with N-acetoxy-acetyl-amino-fluorene (AAF). The extract selectively fails to complement extracts of group 1 and 4 mutants consistent with the notion that the affected proteins, ERCC1 and ERCC4, are part of the same complex and that mutations in one subunit also affect the other component. Mutant UV212 is a CG1 mutant with approximately 3.3 x wild-type UV and approximately 5-10 x wild-type MMC sensitivity, with profoundly deficient UDS and hypermutability (approximately 5.8 x) by UV. Mutant UV201, probably in CG1, is only slightly (approximately 1.5 x) UV-sensitive and has near wild-type (1.02X) UV mutability. These unusual group 1 and 4 mutants demonstrate that the unique UV and MMC sensitivity phenotypes displayed by these groups can be separated and support the idea that they are the result of distinct repair functions of the corresponding ERCC1 and ERCC4 genes: nucleotide excision repair for UV lesions and a separate repair pathway for removal of interstrand crosslinks.
Human Mutation | 2013
Xiaohui Tan; Sarah L. Anzick; Sikandar G. Khan; Takahiro Ueda; Gary Stone; John J. DiGiovanna; Deborah Tamura; Daniel Wattendorf; David B. Busch; Carmen C. Brewer; Christopher Zalewski; Andrew J. Griffith; Paul S. Meltzer; Kenneth H. Kraemer
Melanoma is the most deadly form of skin cancer and DiGeorge syndrome (DGS) is the most frequent interstitial deletion syndrome. We characterized a novel balanced t(9;22)(p21;q11.2) translocation in a patient with melanoma, DNA repair deficiency, and features of DGS including deafness and malformed inner ears. Using chromosome sorting, we located the 9p21 breakpoint in CDKN2A intron 1. This resulted in underexpression of the tumor suppressor p14 alternate reading frame (p14ARF); the reduced DNA repair was corrected by transfection with p14ARF. Ultraviolet radiation–type p14ARF mutations in his melanoma implicated p14ARF in its pathogenesis. The 22q11.2 breakpoint was located in a palindromic AT‐rich repeat (PATRR22). We identified a new gene, FAM230A, that contains PATRR22 within an intron. The 22q11.2 breakpoint was located 800 kb centromeric to TBX1, which is required for inner ear development. TBX1 expression was greatly reduced. The translocation resulted in a chimeric transcript encoding portions of p14ARF and FAM230A. Inhibition of chimeric p14ARF‐FAM230A expression increased p14ARF and TBX1 expression and improved DNA repair. Expression of the chimera in normal cells produced dominant negative inhibition of p14ARF. Similar chimeric mRNAs may mediate haploinsufficiency in DGS or dominant negative inhibition of other genes such as those involved in melanoma.
Mutation Research-dna Repair | 2001
David B. Busch; Deborah White Ziffer; Donna M. Coleman; Lisa Wills; H Greg McDonough; Nigel J. Jones
The Facility for Automated Experiments in Cell Biology (FAECB) collection of over 200 lines of ultraviolet (UV)-sensitive mutant Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells has previously been studied for complementation group assignment (CG), with representatives of rodent UV CGs 1-6 (ERCC1-6) and the new rodent XRCC9/FANCG group identified. Ten mutants from the collection, including a further six derived from wildtype AA8, three UV-sensitive double-mutants of CHO ERCC1 cell line UV4, and a UV-sensitive mutant of CHO XRCC1 cell line EM9, had not been assigned or characterized in these previous studies. These 10 mutants include 8 with approximately 1.5-fold the UV-sensitivity of the parental line (AA8, EM9, or UV4), and 2 with about 2-fold the UV-sensitivity of AA8. The present study reports the partial characterization of these 10 mutants in terms of sensitivity to UV (with and without caffeine), ionizing radiation, mitomycin C (MMC) and ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS); proficiency in DNA repair (unscheduled DNA synthesis (UDS)); and UV-mutability. The phenotypes of the 10 cell lines were heterogeneous, a number showed reduced UDS or UV-sensitization by caffeine, whilst others showed marked sensitivity to EMS or MMC, and they may have mutations in different genes involved in nucleotide excision repair, post-replicational repair, base excision repair or recombinational repair. Previous mutants isolated as part of the FAECB collection have proved to be extremely important in characterizing mammalian DNA repair processes and cloning human repair genes and these current mutants, whilst not as hypersensitive to UV, may still have the potential to make further contributions.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1981
David B. Busch; Kerry W. Brookman; C L Mooney; Donald A. Glaser
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2002
Steffen Emmert; Hanoch Slor; David B. Busch; Sima Batko; Roberta Bliss Albert; Donna M. Coleman; Sikandar G. Khan; Bassam Abu-Libdeh; John J. DiGiovanna; Bari B. Cunningham; Myung-Moo Lee; Jill Crollick; Hiroki Inui; Takahiro Ueda; Mohammad Hedayati; Lawrence Grossman; Tala Shahlavi; James E. Cleaver; Kenneth H. Kraemer