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Dive into the research topics where Louise Prakash is active.

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Featured researches published by Louise Prakash.


Molecular Cell | 2001

The Y-Family of DNA Polymerases

Haruo Ohmori; Errol C. Friedberg; Robert P. P. Fuchs; Myron F. Goodman; Fumio Hanaoka; David C. Hinkle; Thomas A. Kunkel; Christopher W. Lawrence; Zvi Livneh; Takehiko Nohmi; Louise Prakash; Satya Prakash; Takeshi Todo; Graham C. Walker; Zhigang Wang; Roger Woodgate

We would like to thank Tomoo Ogi for generating the unrooted phylogenetic tree shown in Figure 1Figure 1 and Junetsu Ito for his comments on our proposal.


Nature | 2000

Eukaryotic polymerases ι and ζ act sequentially to bypass DNA lesions

Robert E. Johnson; Washington Mt; Lajos Haracska; Satya Prakash; Louise Prakash

DNA lesions can often block DNA replication, so cells possess specialized low-fidelity, and often error-prone, DNA polymerases that can bypass such lesions and promote replication of damaged DNA. The Saccharomyces cerevisiae RAD30 and human hRAD30A encode Polη, which bypasses a cis–syn thymine–thymine dimer efficiently and accurately. Here we show that a related human gene, hRAD30B, encodes the DNA polymerase Polι, which misincorporates deoxynucleotides at a high rate. To bypass damage, Polι specifically incorporates deoxynucleotides opposite highly distorting or non-instructional DNA lesions. This action is combined with that of DNA polymerase Polζ, which is essential for damage-induced mutagenesis, to complete the lesion bypass. Polζ is very inefficient in inserting deoxynucleotides opposite DNA lesions, but readily extends from such deoxynucleotides once they have been inserted. Thus, in a new model for mutagenic bypass of DNA lesions in eukaryotes, the two DNA polymerases act sequentially: Polι incorporates deoxynucleotides opposite DNA lesions, and Polζ functions as a mispair extender.


Nature Genetics | 2000

Efficient and accurate replication in the presence of 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine by DNA polymerase η

Lajos Haracska; Sung-Lim Yu; Robert E. Johnson; Louise Prakash; Satya Prakash

Oxidative damage to DNA has been proposed to have a role in cancer and ageing. Oxygen-free radicals formed during normal aerobic cellular metabolism attack bases in DNA, and 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) is one of the adducts formed. Eukaryotic replicative DNA polymerases replicate DNA containing 8-oxoG by inserting an adenine opposite the lesion; consequently, 8-oxoG is highly mutagenic and causes G:C to T:A transversions. Genetic studies in yeast have indicated a role for mismatch repair in minimizing the incidence of these mutations. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, deletion of OGG1, encoding a DNA glycosylase that functions in the removal of 8-oxoG when paired with C, causes an increase in the rate of G:C to T:A transversions. The ogg1Δ msh2Δ double mutant displays a higher rate of CAN1S to can1r forward mutations than the ogg1Δ or msh2Δ single mutants, and this enhanced mutagenesis is primarily due to G:C to T:A transversions. The gene RAD30 of S. cerevisiae encodes a DNA polymerase, Polη, that efficiently replicates DNA containing a cis-syn thymine-thymine (T-T) dimer by inserting two adenines across from the dimer. In humans, mutations in the yeast RAD30 counterpart, POLH, cause the variant form of xeroderma pigmentosum (XP-V), and XP-V individuals suffer from a high incidence of sunlight-induced skin cancers. Here we show that yeast and human POLη replicate DNA containing 8-oxoG efficiently and accurately by inserting a cytosine across from the lesion and by proficiently extending from this base pair. Consistent with these biochemical studies, a synergistic increase in the rate of spontaneous mutations occurs in the absence of POLη in the yeast ogg1Δ mutant. Our results suggest an additional role for Polη in the prevention of internal cancers in humans that would otherwise result from the mutagenic replication of 8-oxoG in DNA.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Yeast DNA Repair Proteins Rad6 and Rad18 Form a Heterodimer That Has Ubiquitin Conjugating, DNA Binding, and ATP Hydrolytic Activities

Veronique Bailly; Scott Lauder; Satya Prakash; Louise Prakash

The RAD6 and RAD18 genes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae are required for postreplicative bypass of ultraviolet (UV)-damaged DNA and for UV mutagenesis. The RAD6 encoded protein is a ubiquitin conjugating enzyme, and RAD18 encodes a protein containing a RING finger motif and a nucleotide binding motif. Rad18 can be co-immunoprecipitated with Rad6, indicating that the two proteins exist in a complex in vivo. Here, we co-overproduce the two proteins using a yeast multicopy plasmid, purify the Rad6-Rad18 complex to near homogeneity, and show that the complex is heterodimeric. The Rad6-Rad18 heterodimer has ubiquitin conjugating activity, binds single-stranded DNA, and possesses single-stranded DNA-dependent ATPase activity. The Rad6-Rad18 complex provides the first example wherein a ubiquitin conjugating activity is physically associated with DNA binding and ATPase activities provided by an associated protein factor. The co-existence of these activities should provide the complex with the ability to recognize single-stranded DNA resulting from stalling of the replication machinery at DNA damage sites and to recognize the components of the DNA replication machinery for ubiquitination by Rad6.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1981

Characterization of postreplication repair in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and effects of rad6, rad18, rev3 and rad52 mutations.

Louise Prakash

SummaryPostreplication repair of nuclear DNA was examined in an excision defective haploid strain of yeast lacking mitochondrial DNA (ral ρ0). The size of the DNA synthesized in cells exposed to various fluences of ultraviolet light (UV) corresponds approximately to the average interdimer distance in the parental DNA. Upon further incubation of cells following exposure to 2.5 J/m2, the DNA increases in size; by 4 h, it corresponds to DNA from uniformly labeled cells. The alkaline sucrose sedimentation pattern of DNA pulse labeled at various times after UV irradiation, for up to 4 h, does not change substantially, indicating that dimers continue to block DNA replication. A significant amount of postreplication repair requires de novo protein synthesis, as determined by its inhibition by cycloheximide. The rad6 mutant does not carry out postreplication repair, the rad18 and rad52 mutants show great inhibition while the rev3 mutation does not affect postreplication repair. Both recombinational and nonrecombinational repair mechanisms may function in postreplication repair and most of postreplication repair is error free.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2001

Physical and Functional Interactions of Human DNA Polymerase η with PCNA

Lajos Haracska; Robert E. Johnson; Ildiko Unk; Jerard Hurwitz; Louise Prakash; Satya Prakash

ABSTRACT Human DNA polymerase η (hPolη) functions in the error-free replication of UV-damaged DNA, and mutations in hPolη cause cancer-prone syndrome, the variant form of xeroderma pigmentosum. However, in spite of its key role in promoting replication through a variety of distorting DNA lesions, the manner by which hPolη is targeted to the replication machinery stalled at a lesion site remains unknown. Here, we provide evidence for the physical interaction of hPolη with proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and show that mutations in the PCNA binding motif of hPolη inactivate this interaction. PCNA, together with replication factor C and replication protein A, stimulates the DNA synthetic activity of hPolη, and steady-state kinetic studies indicate that this stimulation accrues from an increase in the efficiency of nucleotide insertion resulting from a reduction in the apparentK m for the incoming nucleotide.


Molecular Cell | 2007

Yeast Rad5 Protein Required for Postreplication Repair Has a DNA Helicase Activity Specific for Replication Fork Regression

András Blastyák; Lajos Pintér; Ildiko Unk; Louise Prakash; Satya Prakash; Lajos Haracska

Summary Lesions in the template DNA strand block the progression of the replication fork. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, replication through DNA lesions is mediated by different Rad6-Rad18-dependent means, which include translesion synthesis and a Rad5-dependent postreplicational repair pathway that repairs the discontinuities that form in the DNA synthesized from damaged templates. Although translesion synthesis is well characterized, little is known about the mechanisms that modulate Rad5-dependent postreplicational repair. Here we show that yeast Rad5 has a DNA helicase activity that is specialized for replication fork regression. On model replication fork structures, Rad5 concertedly unwinds and anneals the nascent and the parental strands without exposing extended single-stranded regions. These observations provide insight into the mechanism of postreplicational repair in which Rad5 action promotes template switching for error-free damage bypass.


Nature | 2004

Replication by human DNA polymerase-|[iota]| occurs by Hoogsteen base-pairing

Deepak T. Nair; Robert E. Johnson; Satya Prakash; Louise Prakash; Aneel K. Aggarwal

Almost all DNA polymerases show a strong preference for incorporating the nucleotide that forms the correct Watson–Crick base pair with the template base. In addition, the catalytic efficiencies with which any given polymerase forms the four possible correct base pairs are roughly the same. Human DNA polymerase-ι (hPolι), a member of the Y family of DNA polymerases, is an exception to these rules. hPolι incorporates the correct nucleotide opposite a template adenine with a several hundred to several thousand fold greater efficiency than it incorporates the correct nucleotide opposite a template thymine, whereas its efficiency for correct nucleotide incorporation opposite a template guanine or cytosine is intermediate between these two extremes. Here we present the crystal structure of hPolι bound to a template primer and an incoming nucleotide. The structure reveals a polymerase that is ‘specialized’ for Hoogsteen base-pairing, whereby the templating base is driven to the syn conformation. Hoogsteen base-pairing offers a basis for the varied efficiencies and fidelities of hPolι opposite different template bases, and it provides an elegant mechanism for promoting replication through minor-groove purine adducts that interfere with replication.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae DNA repair gene RAD23 encodes a nuclear protein containing a ubiquitin-like domain required for biological function

John F. Watkins; Patrick Sung; Louise Prakash; Satya Prakash

In eukaryotes, the posttranslational conjugation of ubiquitin to various cellular proteins marks them for degradation. Interestingly, several proteins have been reported to contain ubiquitin-like (ub-like) domains that are in fact specified by the DNA coding sequences of the proteins. The biological role of the ub-like domain in these proteins is not known; however, it has been proposed that this domain functions as a degradation signal rendering the proteins unstable. Here, we report that the product of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae RAD23 gene, which is involved in excision repair of UV-damaged DNA, bears a ub-like domain at its amino terminus. This finding has presented an opportunity to define the functional significance of this domain. We show that deletion of the ub-like domain impairs the DNA repair function of RAD23 and that this domain can be functionally substituted by the authentic ubiquitin sequence. Surprisingly, RAD23 is highly stable, and the studies reported herein indicate that its ub-like domain does not mediate protein degradation. Thus, in RAD23 at least, the ub-like domain affects protein function in a nonproteolytic manner.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004

Opposing Effects of Ubiquitin Conjugation and SUMO Modification of PCNA on Replicational Bypass of DNA Lesions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Lajos Haracska; Carlos Torres-Ramos; Robert E. Johnson; Satya Prakash; Louise Prakash

ABSTRACT The Rad6-Rad18 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme complex of Saccharomyces cerevisiae promotes replication through DNA lesions via three separate pathways that include translesion synthesis (TLS) by DNA polymerases ζ (Polζ) and Polη and postreplicational repair mediated by the Mms2-Ubc13 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme and Rad5. Here we report our studies with a proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) mutation, pol30-119, which results from a change of the lysine 164 residue to arginine. It has been shown recently that following treatment of yeast cells with DNA-damaging agents, the lysine 164 residue of PCNA becomes monoubiquitinated in a Rad6-Rad18-dependent manner and that subsequently this PCNA residue is polyubiquitinated via a lysine 63-linked ubiquitin chain in an Mms2-Ubc13-, Rad5-dependent manner. PCNA is also modified by SUMO conjugation at the lysine 164 residue. Our genetic studies with the pol30-119 mutation show that in addition to conferring a defect in Polζ-dependent UV mutagenesis and in Polη-dependent TLS, this PCNA mutation inhibits postreplicational repair of discontinuities that form in the newly synthesized strand across from UV lesions. In addition, we provide evidence for the activation of the RAD52 recombinational pathway in the pol30-119 mutant and we infer that SUMO conjugation at the lysine 164 residue of PCNA has a role in suppressing the Rad52-dependent postreplicational repair pathway.

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Satya Prakash

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Patrick Sung

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Aneel K. Aggarwal

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Lajos Haracska

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Sami N. Guzder

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Ildiko Unk

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Lajos Haracska

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Jung Hoon Yoon

University of Texas Medical Branch

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