Dik C. van Gent
Erasmus University Rotterdam
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dik C. van Gent.
Nature Reviews Genetics | 2001
Dik C. van Gent; Jan H.J. Hoeijmakers; Roland Kanaar
Genome stability is of primary importance for the survival and proper functioning of all organisms. Double-stranded breaks in DNA are important threats to genome integrity because they can result in chromosomal aberrations that can affect, simultaneously, many genes, and lead to cell malfunctioning and cell death. These detrimental consequences are counteracted by two mechanistically distinct pathways of double-stranded break repair: homologous recombination and non-homologous end-joining. Recently, unexpected links between these double-stranded break-repair systems, and several human genome instability and cancer predisposition syndromes, have emerged. Now, interactions between both double-stranded break-repair pathways and other cellular processes, such as cell-cycle regulation and replication, are being unveiled.
Trends in Cell Biology | 1998
Roland Kanaar; Jan H.J. Hoeijmakers; Dik C. van Gent
DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are major threats to the genomic integrity of cells. If not taken care of properly, they can cause chromosome fragmentation, loss and translocation, possibly resulting in carcinogenesis. Upon DSB formation, cell-cycle checkpoints are triggered and multiple DSB repair pathways can be activated. Recent research on the Nijmegen breakage syndrome, which predisposes patients to cancer, suggests a direct link between activation of cell-cycle checkpoints and DSB repair. Furthermore, the biochemical activities of proteins involved in the two major DSB repair pathways, homologous recombination and DNA end-joining, are now beginning to emerge. This review discusses these new findings and their implications for the mechanisms of DSB repair.
Molecular Cell | 2001
Martijn de Jager; John van Noort; Dik C. van Gent; Cees Dekker; Roland Kanaar; Claire Wyman
The human Rad50 protein, classified as a structural maintenance of chromosomes (SMC) family member, is complexed with Mre11 (R/M) and has important functions in at least two distinct double-strand break repair pathways. To find out what the common function of R/M in these pathways might be, we investigated its architecture. Scanning force microscopy showed that the complex architecture is distinct from the described SMC family members. R/M consisted of two highly flexible intramolecular coiled coils emanating from a central globular DNA binding domain. DNA end-bound R/M oligomers could tether linear DNA molecules. These observations suggest that a unified role for R/M in multiple aspects of DNA repair and chromosome metabolism is to provide a flexible, possibly dynamic, link between DNA ends.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Pierre-Olivier Mari; Bogdan I. Florea; Stephan Persengiev; Nicole S. Verkaik; Hennie T. Brüggenwirth; Mauro Modesti; Giuseppina Giglia-Mari; Karel Bezstarosti; Jeroen Demmers; Theo M. Luider; Adriaan B. Houtsmuller; Dik C. van Gent
DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair by nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) requires the assembly of several proteins on DNA ends. Although biochemical studies have elucidated several aspects of the NHEJ reaction mechanism, much less is known about NHEJ in living cells, mainly because of the inability to visualize NHEJ repair proteins at DNA damage. Here we provide evidence that a pulsed near IR laser can produce DSBs without any visible alterations in the nucleus, and we show that NHEJ proteins accumulate in the irradiated areas. The levels of DSBs and Ku accumulation diminished in time, showing that this approach allows us to study DNA repair kinetics in vivo. Remarkably, the Ku heterodimers on DNA ends were in dynamic equilibrium with Ku70/80 in solution, showing that NHEJ complex assembly is reversible. Accumulation of XRCC4/ligase IV on DSBs depended on the presence of Ku70/80, but not DNA-PKCS. We detected a direct interaction between Ku70 and XRCC4 that could explain these requirements. Our results suggest that this assembly constitutes the core of the NHEJ reaction and that XRCC4 may serve as a flexible tether between Ku70/80 and ligase IV.
Nature | 2002
Hiroshi Tauchi; Junya Kobayashi; Ken ichi Morishima; Dik C. van Gent; Takahiro Shiraishi; Nicole S. Verkaik; Diana VanHeems; Emi Ito; Asako Nakamura; Eiichiro Sonoda; Minoru Takata; Shunichi Takeda; Shinya Matsuura; Kenshi Komatsu
Double-strand breaks occur during DNA replication and are also induced by ionizing radiation. There are at least two pathways which can repair such breaks: non-homologous end joining and homologous recombination (HR). Although these pathways are essentially independent of one another, it is possible that the proteins Mre11, Rad50 and Xrs2 are involved in both pathways in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In vertebrate cells, little is known about the exact function of the Mre11–Rad50–Nbs1 complex in the repair of double-strand breaks because Mre11- and Rad50-null mutations are lethal. Here we show that Nbs1 is essential for HR-mediated repair in higher vertebrate cells. The disruption of Nbs1 reduces gene conversion and sister chromatid exchanges, similar to other HR-deficient mutants. In fact, a site-specific double-strand break repair assay showed a notable reduction of HR events following generation of such breaks in Nbs1-disrupted cells. The rare recombinants observed in the Nbs1-disrupted cells were frequently found to have aberrant structures, which possibly arise from unusual crossover events, suggesting that the Nbs1 complex might be required to process recombination intermediates.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2007
Naoya Uematsu; Eric Weterings; Ken Ichi Yano; Keiko Morotomi-Yano; Burkhard Jakob; Gisela Taucher-Scholz; Pierre Olivier Mari; Dik C. van Gent; Benjamin P C Chen; David J. Chen
The DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (DNA-PKCS) plays an important role during the repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). It is recruited to DNA ends in the early stages of the nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) process, which mediates DSB repair. To study DNA-PKCS recruitment in vivo, we used a laser system to introduce DSBs in a specified region of the cell nucleus. We show that DNA-PKCS accumulates at DSB sites in a Ku80-dependent manner, and that neither the kinase activity nor the phosphorylation status of DNA-PKCS influences its initial accumulation. However, impairment of both of these functions results in deficient DSB repair and the maintained presence of DNA-PKCS at unrepaired DSBs. The use of photobleaching techniques allowed us to determine that the kinase activity and phosphorylation status of DNA-PKCS influence the stability of its binding to DNA ends. We suggest a model in which DNA-PKCS phosphorylation/autophosphorylation facilitates NHEJ by destabilizing the interaction of DNA-PKCS with the DNA ends.
The EMBO Journal | 1997
Dik C. van Gent; Kevin Hiom; Tanya T. Paull; Martin Gellert
V(D)J recombination requires a pair of signal sequences with spacer lengths of 12 and 23 bp between the conserved heptamer and nonamer elements. The RAG1 and RAG2 proteins initiate the reaction by making double‐strand DNA breaks at both signals, and must thus be able to operate on these two different spatial arrangements. We show that the DNA‐bending proteins HMG1 and HMG2 stimulate cleavage and RAG protein binding at the 23 bp spacer signal. These findings suggest that DNA bending is important for bridging the longer spacer, and explain how a similar array of RAG proteins could accommodate a signal with either a 12 or a 23 bp spacer. An additional effect of HMG proteins is to stimulate coupled cleavage greatly when both signal sequences are present, suggesting that these proteins also aid the formation of a synaptic complex.
The EMBO Journal | 1993
Dik C. van Gent; Cornelis Vink; A.A. Groeneger; R.H. Plassterk
HIV integrase (IN) cleaves two nucleotides off the 3′ end of viral DNA and integrates viral DNA into target DNA. Previously, three functional domains in the HIV IN protein have been identified: (i) the central catalytic domain, (ii) the C‐terminal DNA binding domain, and (iii) the N‐terminal region, which is also necessary for activity. We have now investigated whether IN proteins mutated in different domains can complement each other. Mutant D116I does not contain an intact active site, but does bind DNA, whereas the C‐terminal deletion mutant C delta 73 does not bind DNA, but does have an intact active site. Neither mutant protein mediates site‐specific cleavage or integration. However, a mixture of both proteins is active, suggesting that IN functions as an oligomer, and that two subunits can have different functions; one subunit binds the (viral) DNA and another subunit provides the active site. We found three classes of mutants, corresponding to the three domains mentioned above. Mutants from different classes, but not from the same class, can complement each other. However, complementation is most efficient when the N‐ and C‐termini are present on the same molecule.
The EMBO Journal | 2009
Joris Pothof; Nicole S. Verkaik; Wilfred van IJcken; Erik A.C. Wiemer; Van T B Ta; Gijsbertus T. J. van der Horst; Nicolaas G. J. Jaspers; Dik C. van Gent; Jan H.J. Hoeijmakers; Stephan Persengiev
DNA damage provokes DNA repair, cell‐cycle regulation and apoptosis. This DNA‐damage response encompasses gene‐expression regulation at the transcriptional and post‐translational levels. We show that cellular responses to UV‐induced DNA damage are also regulated at the post‐transcriptional level by microRNAs. Survival and checkpoint response after UV damage was severely reduced on microRNA‐mediated gene‐silencing inhibition by knocking down essential components of the microRNA‐processing pathway (Dicer and Ago2). UV damage triggered a cell‐cycle‐dependent relocalization of Ago2 into stress granules and various microRNA‐expression changes. Ago2 relocalization required CDK activity, but was independent of ATM/ATR checkpoint signalling, whereas UV‐responsive microRNA expression was only partially ATM/ATR independent. Both microRNA‐expression changes and stress‐granule formation were most pronounced within the first hours after genotoxic stress, suggesting that microRNA‐mediated gene regulation operates earlier than most transcriptional responses. The functionality of the microRNA response is illustrated by the UV‐inducible miR‐16 that downregulates checkpoint‐gene CDC25a and regulates cell proliferation. We conclude that microRNA‐mediated gene regulation adds a new dimension to the DNA‐damage response.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008
Mirjam van der Burg; Hanna IJspeert; Nicole S. Verkaik; Tuba Turul; Wouter W. Wiegant; Keiko Morotomi-Yano; Pierre Olivier Mari; Ilhan Tezcan; David J. Chen; Małgorzata Z. Zdzienicka; Jacques J.M. van Dongen; Dik C. van Gent
Radiosensitive T-B- severe combined immunodeficiency (RS-SCID) is caused by defects in the nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) DNA repair pathway, which results in failure of functional V(D)J recombination. Here we have identified the first human RS-SCID patient to our knowledge with a DNA-PKcs missense mutation (L3062R). The causative mutation did not affect the kinase activity or DNA end-binding capacity of DNA-PKcs itself; rather, the presence of long P-nucleotide stretches in the immunoglobulin coding joints indicated that it caused insufficient Artemis activation, something that is dependent on Artemis interaction with autophosphorylated DNA-PKcs. Moreover, overall end-joining activity was hampered, suggesting that Artemis-independent DNA-PKcs functions were also inhibited. This study demonstrates that the presence of DNA-PKcs kinase activity is not sufficient to rule out a defect in this gene during diagnosis and treatment of RS-SCID patients. Further, the data suggest that residual DNA-PKcs activity is indispensable in humans.