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Dive into the research topics where Michael M. Seidman is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael M. Seidman.


Science | 1996

Mutagenesis in Mammalian Cells Induced by Triple Helix Formation and Transcription-Coupled Repair

Gan Wang; Michael M. Seidman; Peter M. Glazer

When mammalian cells were treated with triplex-forming oligonucleotides of sufficient binding affinity, mutations were specifically induced in a simian virus 40 vector contained within the cells. Triplex-induced mutagenesis was not detected in xeroderma pigmentosum group A cells nor in Cockaynes syndrome group B cells, indicating a requirement for excision repair and for transcription-coupled repair, respectively, in the process. Triplex formation was also found to stimulate DNA repair synthesis in human cell extracts, in a pattern correlating with the inhibition of transcription in such extracts. These findings may have implications for therapeutic applications of triplex DNA and raise the possibility that naturally occurring triple helices are a source of genetic instability.


Gene | 1985

A shuttle vector plasmid for studying carcinogen-induced point mutations in mammalian cells

Michael M. Seidman; Kathleen Dixon; Abdur Razzaque; Robert J. Zagursky; Michael L. Berman

We have constructed a shuttle vector plasmid for studying mutagenesis in mammalian cells. The plasmid replicates in cell lines permissive for SV40 virus as well as in the bacterium Escherichia coli and carries a bacterial suppressor tRNA gene (supF) that can serve as a mutagenesis marker. The plasmid replicates as efficiently as SV40 virus in African Green Monkey kidney CV1 cells, indicating that all traces of the inhibitory sequences normally found in pBR322 and its derivatives have been removed. The design of the plasmid and the small size of the mutagenesis target gene decrease the probability of recovering spontaneous deletion mutations that have been shown to occur at high frequency during passage in mammalian cells. The frequency of spontaneous-mutant plasmids recovered after passage in CV1 cells is substantially lower than with other vectors described previously. When the plasmid DNA is treated with UV radiation before passage in CV1 cells, mutants are observed at a frequency about 20-fold above the spontaneous background.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1995

Targeted mutagenesis in mammalian cells mediated by intracellular triple helix formation.

Gan Wang; Daniel Levy; Michael M. Seidman; Peter M. Glazer

As an alternative to standard gene transfer techniques for genetic manipulation, we have investigated the use of triple helix-forming oligonucleotides to target mutations to selected genes within mammalian cells. By treating monkey COS cells with oligonucleotides linked to psoralen, we have generated targeted mutations in a simian virus 40 (SV40) vector contained within the cells via intracellular triple helix formation. Oligonucleotide entry into the cells and sequence-specific triplex formation within the SV40 DNA deliver the psoralen to the targeted site. Photoactivation of the psoralen by long-wavelength UV light yields adducts and thereby mutations at that site. We engineered into the SV40 vector novel supF mutation reporter genes containing modified polypurine sites amenable to triplex formation. By comparing the abilities of a series of oligonucleotides to target these new sites, we show that targeted mutagenesis in vivo depends on the strength and specificity of the third-strand binding. Oligonucleotides with weak target site binding affinity or with only partial target site homology were ineffective at inducing mutations in the SV40 vectors within the COS cells. We also show that the targeted mutagenesis is dependent on the oligonucleotide concentration and is influenced by the timing of the oligonucleotide treatment and of the UV irradiation of the cells. Frequencies of intracellular targeted mutagenesis in the range of 1 to 2% were observed, depending upon the conditions of the experiment. DNA sequence analysis revealed that most of the mutations were T.A-to-A.T transversions precisely at the targeted psoralen intercalation site. Several deletions encompassing that site were also seen. The ability to target mutations to selected sites within mammalian cells by using modified triplex-forming oligonucleotides may provide a new research tool and may eventually lead to therapeutic applications.


Nature Genetics | 1998

Targeted gene knockout mediated by triple helix forming oligonucleotides

A. Majumdar; A. Khorlin; N. Dyatkina; Lin F; James R. Powell; Jilan Liu; Zhizhong Fei; Yu. Khripine; K. A. Watanabe; J. George; Peter M. Glazer; Michael M. Seidman

Triple helix forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) recognize and bind sequences in duplex DNA and have received considerable attention because of their potential for targeting specific genomic sites. TFOs can deliver DNA reactive reagents to specific sequences in purified chromosomal DNA (ref. 4) and nuclei. However, chromosome targeting in viable cells has not been demonstrated, and in vitro experiments indicate that chromatin structure is incompatible with triplex formation. We have prepared modified TFOs, linked to the DNA-crosslinking reagent psoralen, directed at a site in the Hprt gene. We show that stable Hprt-deficient clones can be recovered following introduction of the TFOs into viable cells and photoactivation of the psoralen. Analysis of 282 clones indicated that 85% contained mutations in the triplex target region. We observed mainly deletions and some insertions. These data indicate that appropriately constructed TFOs can find chromosomal targets, and suggest that the chromatin structure in the target region is more dynamic than predicted by the in vitro experiments.


Molecular Cell | 2010

A Histone-Fold Complex and FANCM Form a Conserved DNA-Remodeling Complex to Maintain Genome Stability

Zhijiang Yan; Mathieu Delannoy; Chen Ling; Danielle L. Daee; Fekret Osman; Parameswary A. Muniandy; Xi Shen; Anneke B. Oostra; Hansen Du; Jurgen Steltenpool; Ti Lin; Beatrice Schuster; Chantal Décaillet; Andrzej Stasiak; Alicja Z. Stasiak; Stacie Stone; Maureen E. Hoatlin; Detlev Schindler; Christopher L. Woodcock; Hans Joenje; Ranjan Sen; Johan P. de Winter; Lei Li; Michael M. Seidman; Matthew C. Whitby; Kyungjae Myung; Angelos Constantinou; Weidong Wang

FANCM remodels branched DNA structures and plays essential roles in the cellular response to DNA replication stress. Here, we show that FANCM forms a conserved DNA-remodeling complex with a histone-fold heterodimer, MHF. We find that MHF stimulates DNA binding and replication fork remodeling by FANCM. In the cell, FANCM and MHF are rapidly recruited to forks stalled by DNA interstrand crosslinks, and both are required for cellular resistance to such lesions. In vertebrates, FANCM-MHF associates with the Fanconi anemia (FA) core complex, promotes FANCD2 monoubiquitination in response to DNA damage, and suppresses sister-chromatid exchanges. Yeast orthologs of these proteins function together to resist MMS-induced DNA damage and promote gene conversion at blocked replication forks. Thus, FANCM-MHF is an essential DNA-remodeling complex that protects replication forks from yeast to human.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2003

The potential for gene repair via triple helix formation

Michael M. Seidman; Peter M. Glazer

Triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) can bind to polypurine/polypyrimidine regions in DNA in a sequence-specific manner. The specificity of this binding raises the possibility of using triplex formation for directed genome modification, with the ultimate goal of repairing genetic defects in human cells. Several studies have demonstrated that treatment of mammalian cells with TFOs can provoke DNA repair and recombination, in a manner that can be exploited to introduce desired sequence changes. This review will summarize recent advances in this field while also highlighting major obstacles that remain to be overcome before the application of triplex technology to therapeutic gene repair can be achieved.


Critical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2010

DNA INTERSTRAND CROSSLINK REPAIR IN MAMMALIAN CELLS: STEP BY STEP

Parameswary A. Muniandy; Jia Liu; Alokes Majumdar; Su-Ting Liu; Michael M. Seidman

Interstrand DNA crosslinks (ICLs) are formed by natural products of metabolism and by chemotherapeutic reagents. Work in E. coli identified a two cycle repair scheme involving incisions on one strand on either side of the ICL (unhooking) producing a gapped intermediate with the incised oligonucleotide attached to the intact strand. The gap is filled by recombinational repair or lesion bypass synthesis. The remaining monoadduct is then removed by nucleotide excision repair (NER). Despite considerable effort, our understanding of each step in mammalian cells is still quite limited. In part this reflects the variety of crosslinking compounds, each with distinct structural features, used by different investigators. Also, multiple repair pathways are involved, variably operative during the cell cycle. G1 phase repair requires functions from NER, although the mechanism of recognition has not been determined. Repair can be initiated by encounters with the transcriptional apparatus, or a replication fork. In the case of the latter, the reconstruction of a replication fork, stalled or broken by collision with an ICL, adds to the complexity of the repair process. The enzymology of unhooking, the identity of the lesion bypass polymerases required to fill the first repair gap, and the functions involved in the second repair cycle are all subjects of active inquiry. Here we will review current understanding of each step in ICL repair in mammalian cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Triple-Helix Formation Induces Recombination in Mammalian Cells via a Nucleotide Excision Repair-Dependent Pathway

A. Fawad Faruqi; Hirock J. Datta; Dana Carroll; Michael M. Seidman; Peter M. Glazer

ABSTRACT The ability to stimulate recombination in a site-specific manner in mammalian cells may provide a useful tool for gene knockout and a valuable strategy for gene therapy. We previously demonstrated that psoralen adducts targeted by triple-helix-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) could induce recombination between tandem repeats of asupF reporter gene in a simian virus 40 vector in monkey COS cells. Based on work showing that triple helices, even in the absence of associated psoralen adducts, are able to provoke DNA repair and cause mutations, we asked whether intermolecular triplexes could stimulate recombination. Here, we report that triple-helix formation itself is capable of promoting recombination and that this effect is dependent on a functional nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway. Transfection of COS cells carrying the dual supF vector with a purine-rich TFO, AG30, designed to bind as a third strand to a region between the two mutant supF genes yielded recombinants at a frequency of 0.37%, fivefold above background, whereas a scrambled sequence control oligomer was ineffective. In human cells deficient in the NER factor XPA, the ability of AG30 to induce recombination was eliminated, but it was restored in a corrected subline expressing the XPA cDNA. In comparison, the ability of triplex-directed psoralen cross-links to induce recombination was only partially reduced in XPA-deficient cells, suggesting that NER is not the only pathway that can metabolize targeted psoralen photoadducts into recombinagenic intermediates. Interestingly, the triplex-induced recombination was unaffected in cells deficient in DNA mismatch repair, challenging our previous model of a heteroduplex intermediate and supporting a model based on end joining. This work demonstrates that oligonucleotide-mediated triplex formation can be recombinagenic, providing the basis for a potential strategy to direct genome modification by using high-affinity DNA binding ligands.


Mutation Research\/reviews in Genetic Toxicology | 1989

Use of supF, an Escherichia coli tyrosine suppressor tRNA gene, as a mutagenic target in shuttle-vector plasmids

Kenneth H. Kraemer; Michael M. Seidman

The Escherichia coli tyrosine amber suppressor tRNA gene, supF, has been utilized as a mutagenic target in several shuttle-vector plasmids. Data on mutagenic inactivation of suppressor activity was obtained from induced mutagenesis experiments with plasmids pZ189 and p3AC, and from studies on alterations of the supF gene transduced into E. coli. 162 single or tandem base-substitution mutations that reduce or eliminate suppressor activity were identified at 86 sites within 158 base pairs. The 2 transition and 4 transversion mutations possible in double-stranded DNA were all detectable. At 56 sites two different inactivating mutations were found; and at 20 sites all 3 possible base substitution mutations inactivated suppressor function. Most of the mutations were clustered within the mature tRNA region: 144 of the base-substitution mutations were found at 74 sites within the 85-bp mature tRNA region. Insertions of 1 or 2 bases at 4 sites and deletions of 1 to 3 bases at 15 sites were found to inactivate supF function. A few silent mutations which do not inactivate suppressor function were found: single base-substitutions at 4 sites, 14 pairs of silent double mutations, and a large deletion including the promoter region. The supF gene is thus an extremely sensitive target for mutagenic inactivation in shuttle-vector plasmids.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Targeted Correction of an Episomal Gene in Mammalian Cells by a Short DNA Fragment Tethered to a Triplex-forming Oligonucleotide

Phillip P. Chan; Michael Lin; A. Fawad Faruqi; James R. Powell; Michael M. Seidman; Peter M. Glazer

Triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) can bind to polypurine/polypyrimidine regions in DNA in a sequence-specific manner and provoke DNA repair. We have coupled a TFO to a short donor fragment of DNA that shares homology to a selected gene as a strategy to mediate gene targeting and correction. In this bifunctional oligonucleotide, the TFO domain is designed to bind the target gene and stimulate repair and recombination, with the donor domain positioned for recombination and information transfer. A series of these tethered donor-TFO (TD-TFO) molecules with donor domains of 40–44 nucleotides and TFO domains in both the purine and pyrimidine triplex motifs were tested for their ability to mediate either gene correction or mutation of a supF reporter gene contained in a SV40 shuttle vector in mammalian cells. In vitro binding assays revealed that the attachment of the donor domain via a flexible linker did not significantly alter the binding affinity of the TFO domain for the polypurine site in the supF target DNA, with equilibrium dissociation constants in the 10−8 m range. Experiments in which the target vector and the linked TD-TFOs were pre-incubated in vitro and co-transfected into cells led to conversion frequencies approaching 1%, 4-fold greater than with the two domains unlinked. When cells that had been previously transfected with the SV40 vector were electroporated with the TD-TFOs, frequencies of base pair-specific gene correction were seen in the range of 0.04%, up to 50-fold over background and at least 3-fold over either domain alone or in unlinked combinations. Sequence conversion by the TD-TFOs was achieved using either single- or double-stranded donor domains and either triplex motif. Substitution of either domain in the TD-TFO with control sequences yielded reagents with diminished activity, as did mixtures of unlinked TFO and donor DNA segments. The boost in activity provided by the attached TFO domain was reduced in cells deficient in the nucleotide excision repair factor XPA but was restored in a subclone of these cells expressing XPA cDNA, suggesting a role for nucleotide excision repair in the pathway of triple helix-stimulated gene conversion. The ability to correct or mutate a specific target site in mammalian cells using the TD-TFO strategy may provide a useful tool for research and possibly for therapeutic applications.

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Alokes Majumdar

National Institutes of Health

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Kenneth H. Kraemer

National Institutes of Health

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Marina Bellani

National Institutes of Health

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Weidong Wang

National Institutes of Health

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Paul S. Miller

Johns Hopkins University

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Jing Huang

National Institutes of Health

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Saraswathy Seetharam

National Institutes of Health

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