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Dive into the research topics where Jela Brozmanová is active.

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Featured researches published by Jela Brozmanová.


Folia Microbiologica | 1999

Oxidative stress in microorganisms--I. Microbial vs. higher cells--damage and defenses in relation to cell aging and death.

K. Sigler; Jiří Chaloupka; Jela Brozmanová; N. Stadler; Milan Höfer

Oxidative stress in microbial cells shares many similarities with other cell types but it has its specific features which may differe in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. We survey here the properties and actions of primary sources of oxidative stress, the role of transition metals in oxidative stress and cell protective machinery of microbial cells, and compare them with analogous features of other cell types. Other features to be compared are the action of reactive oxygen species (ROS) on cell constituents, secondary lipid-or protein-based radicals and other stress products. Repair of oxidative injury by microorganisms and proteolytic removal of irreparable cell constituents are briefly described. Oxidative damage of aerobically growing microbial cells by endogenously formed ROS mostly does not induce changes similar to the aging of multiplying mammalian cells. Rapid growth of bacteria and yeast prevents accumulation of impaired macromolecules which are repaired, diluted or eliminated. During growth some simple fungi, such as yeast orPodospora spp., exhibit aging whose primary cause seems to be fragmentation of the nucleolus or impairment of mitochondrial DNA integrity. Yeast cell aging seems to be accelerated by endogenous oxidative stress. Unlike most growing microbial cells, stationaryphase cells gradually lose their viability because of a continuous oxidative stress, in spite of an increased synthesis of antioxidant enzymes. Unlike in most microorganisms, in plant and animal cells a severe oxidative stress induces a specific programmed death pathway-apoptosis. The scant data on the microbial death mechanisms induced by oxidative stress indicate that in bacteria cell death can result from activation of autolytic enzymes (similarly to the programmed mother-cell death at the end of bacillar sporulation). Yeast and other simple eukaryotes contain components of a proapoptotic pathway which are silent under normal conditions but can be activated by oxidative stress or by manifestation of mammalian death genes, such asbak orbax. Other aspects, such as regulation of oxidative-stress response, role of defense enzymes and their control, acquisition of stress tolerance, stress signaling and its role in stress response, as well as cross-talk between different stress factors, will be the subject of a subsequent review.


Mutation Research-genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis | 2008

Rad52 has a role in the repair of sodium selenite-induced DNA damage in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Lucia Letavayová; Danuša Vlasáková; Viera Vlčková; Jela Brozmanová; Miroslav Chovanec

Selenium (Se) is a chemo-preventive agent that has been shown to have a protective role against cancer. The inorganic form of Se, sodium selenite (Na2SeO3), has frequently been included in various chemo-prevention studies, and this commercially available form of Se is used as dietary supplement by the public. Because high doses of this Se compound can be toxic, the underlying molecular mechanisms of sodium selenite toxicity need to be elucidated. Recently, we have reported that sodium selenite is acting as an oxidizing agent in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, producing oxidative damage to DNA. This pro-oxidative activity of sodium selenite likely accounted for the observed DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) and yeast cell death. In this study we determine the genetic factors that are responsible for repair of sodium selenite-induced DSB. We report that the Rad52 protein is indispensable for repairing sodium selenite-induced DSB, suggesting a fundamental role of homologous recombination (HR) in this repair process. These results provide the first evidence that HR may have a fundamental role in the repair of sodium selenite-induced toxic DNA lesions.


Current Genetics | 1996

Further characterization of the yeast pso4-1 mutant: interaction with rad51 and rad52 mutants after photoinduced psoralen lesions

Marcos Antonio de MoraisJunior; Elisabete José Vicente; Jela Brozmanová; Ana Clara Guerrini Schenberg; João Antonio Pêgas Henriques

Thepso4-1 mutant was characterized as deficient in some types of recombination, including gene conversion, crossing over, and intrachromosomal recombination. The mode of interaction betweenpso4-1 andrad51 and betweenpso4-1 andrad52 mutants indicated that thePSO4 gene belongs to theRAD52 epistasis group for strand-break repair. Moreover, the presence of thepso4-1 mutation decreased 8-MOP-photoinduced mutagenesis of therad51 andrad52 mutants. Complementation tests using heterozygous diploid strains showed that thePso4 protein might interact with theRad52 protein during repair of 8-MOP photolesions. Thepso4-1 mutant, even though defective in inter- and intea-chromosomal recombination, conserves the ability for plasmid integration of circular and linear plasmid DNA. On the other hand, similar to therad51 mutant,pso4-1 was able to incise but did not restore high-molecular-weight DNA during the repair of cross links induced by 8-MOP plus UVA. These results, together with those of previous reports, indicate that thePSO4 gene belongs to theRAD52 DNA repair group and its product participates in the DNA rejoining step of the repair of cross-link lesions, which are crucial for induced mutagenesis and recombinogenesis.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1978

UV-inducible repair: Influence on survival, dimer excision, DNA replication and breakdown in Escherichia coli B/r Hcr+ cells

Milena Sedliaková; Viera Slezáriková; František Mašek; Jela Brozmanová

SummaryUsing a model of double-UV-irradiation with inducing1 (non-lethal) and lethal fluences2 we have studied involvement of UV-inducible functions in post-UV-irradiation restoration processes and survival of Escherichia coli B/r thy-thy- Hcr+. Cells irradiated with both inducing and lethal fluences differed from cells irradiated with lethal fluence in the following respects: They were more UV resistant; they did not die during postincubation with chloramphenicol3; they exhibited a significant reduction in dimer excision; they were able to resume DNA replication and produce normal-sized DNA molecules in the presence of chloramphenicol. Since induction was provoked in cell prestarved for amino acids it was not associated with damage to points active in replication. However, the inducible product was more important for repair of replicating than non-replicating cells. The data indicate that protein necessary for resumption of DNA synthesis after UV is not constitutive but inducible.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1991

The Escherichia coli recA gene increases resistance of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to ionizing and ultraviolet radiation

Jela Brozmanová; Ľubica Černáková; Viera Vlčková; Duraj J; Ivana Fridrichova

SummaryThe Escherichia coli recA protein coding region was ligated into an extrachromosomally replicating yeast expression vector downstream of the yeast alcohol dehydrogenase promoter region to produce plasmid pADHrecA. Transformation of the wild-type yeast strains YNN-27 and 7799-4B, as well as the recombination-deficient rad52-t C5-6 mutant, with this shuttle plasmid resulted in the expression of the bacterial 38 kDa RecA protein in exponential phase cells. The wild-type YNN27 and 7799-4B transformants expressing the bacterial recA gene showed increased resistance to the toxic effects of both ionizing and ultraviolet radiation. RecA moderately stimulated the UV-induced mutagenic response of 7799-4B cells. Transformation of the rad52-t mutant with plasmid pADHrecA did not result in the complementation of sensitivity to ionizing radiation. Thus, the RecA protein endows the yeast cells with additional activities, which were shown to be error-prone and dependent on the RAD52 gene.


FEBS Letters | 1972

Thymine-dimer excision after the preirradiation inhibition of DNA synthesis.

Milena Sedliaková; František Mašek; Jela Brozmanová

Ultraviolet radiation impairs cells mainly by the production of pyrimidine dimers in DNA molecules. These lesions can either be removed by excision or tolerated by postreplication repair (for review, see [1] ). Excision has been assumed to be a highly efficient tool enabling the cells to cope with a great number of UV lesions [2]. Thus it was surprising to find that the excision of dimers was rather depressed after amino acidless pretreatment which considerably enhanced the fraction of surviving cells [3]. In this paper the influence of the pre-irradiation inhibition of DNA synthesis on thymine-dimer excision is reported. As demonstrated, the excision process can be considerably inhibited by the inhibition of DNA synthesis before irradiation.


Mutation Research-dna Repair | 1994

The E. coli recA gene can restore the defect in mutagenesis of the pso4-1 mutant of S. cerevisiae.

M.A.M. Morais; Jela Brozmanová; M.S. Benfato; J. Duraj; Viera Vlčková; João Antonio Pêgas Henriques

The E. coli recA gene was introduced into the pso4-1 mutant of S. cerevisiae and transformants were treated with 8-MOP+UVA and 254-nm UV light. The results showed that the recA gene increased the resistance to the toxic effect of 8-MOP+UVA and restored the frequency of reversion of the pso4-1 mutants after both treatments. The presence of the recA gene stimulated expression of the small subunit of the ribonucleotide reductase (Rnr2) in the pso4-1 mutants. Thus the E. coli recA gene is functional in yeast. Moreover, it was shown that the pso4-1 mutant is epistatic to pso1-1 and rad6-1, which belong to a mutagenic repair pathway. We propose here that the PSO4 gene has some role in the control of mutagenic repair in yeast.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1974

Depression of thymine dimer excision in various excision-proficient strains of Escherichia coli

Milena Sedliaková; František Mašek; Jela Brozmanová; Ľubica Mašková; Viera Slezáriková

Abstract A simultaneous starvation of thymine and amino acid applied prior to ultraviolet irradiation may cause a depression of thymine dimer excision. The starvation need not cause either death of the cells during the treatment or a decrease of the surviving ability after irradiation. The above effects may be obtained in various excision-proficient cells of Escherichia coli when proper starvation conditions are employed.


Mutation Research-dna Repair | 2001

Increased DNA double strand breakage is responsible for sensitivity of the pso3-1 mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to hydrogen peroxide.

Jela Brozmanová; Viera Vlčková; Eva Farkašová; Andrej Dudáš; Danuša Vlasáková; Miroslav Chovanec; Žaneta Mikulovská; Ivana Fridrichova; Jenifer Saffi; João Antonio Pêgas Henriques

Escherichia coli endonuclease III (endo III) is the key repair enzyme essential for removal of oxidized pyrimidines and abasic sites. Although two homologues of endo III, Ntgl and Ntg2, were found in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, they do not significantly contribute to repair of oxidative DNA damage in vivo. This suggests that an additional activity(ies) or a regulatory pathway(s) involved in cellular response to oxidative DNA damage may exist in yeast. The pso3-1 mutant of S. cerevisiae was previously shown to be specifically sensitive to toxic effects of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and paraquat. Here, we show that increased DNA double strand breakage is very likely the basis of sensitivity of the pso3-1 mutant cells to H2O2. Our results, thus, indicate an involvement of the Pso3 protein in protection of yeast cells from oxidative stress presumably through its ability to prevent DNA double strand breakage. Furthermore, complementation of the repair defects of the pso3-1 mutant cells by E. coli endo III has been examined. It has been found that expression of the nth gene in the pso3-1 mutant cells recovers survival, decreases mutability and protects yeast genomic DNA from breakage following H2O2 treatment. This might suggest some degree of functional similarity between Pso3 and Nth.


Genetics and Molecular Biology | 1998

Effect of bacterial recA expression on DNA repair in the rad51 and rad52 mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Marcos Antonio de Morais; Viera Vlčková; Ivana Fridrichova; Miroslava Slaninová; Jela Brozmanová; João Antonio Pêgas Henriques

Molecular and functional homology between yeast proteins pRad51 and pRad52 and Escherichia coli pRecA involved in recombinational DNA repair led us to investigate possible effects of recA gene expression on DNA repair in rad51 and rad52 mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The mutant cells were subjected to one of the following treatments: preincubation with 8-methoxypsoralen and subsequent irradiation with 360-nm ultraviolet (UVA) (8-MOP + UVA), irradiation with 254-nm UV light or treatment with methyl methane sulfonate (MMS). While recA expression did not repair lethal DNA lesions in mutant rad51, it was able to partially restore resistance to 8-MOP + UVA and MMS in rad52. Expression of recA could not complement the sensitivity of rad51rad52 double mutants, indicating that pRad51 may be essential for the repair-stimulating activity of pRecA in the rad52 mutant. Spontaneous mutagenesis was increased, and 8-MOP-photoinduced mutagenesis was decreased by the presence of pRecA in rad52, whereas pRecA decreased UV-induced mutagenesis in rad51. Thus, pRecA may function in yeast DNA repair either as a member of a protein complex or as an individual protein that binds to mutagen-damaged DNA.

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Viera Vlčková

Comenius University in Bratislava

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Miroslav Chovanec

Comenius University in Bratislava

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František Mašek

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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João Antonio Pêgas Henriques

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Eva Farkašová

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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Lucia Letavayová

Slovak Academy of Sciences

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