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Dive into the research topics where Michele B. Daly is active.

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Featured researches published by Michele B. Daly.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Host Factor SAMHD1 Restricts DNA Viruses in Non- Dividing Myeloid Cells

Joseph A. Hollenbaugh; Peter Gee; Jonathon Baker; Michele B. Daly; Sarah M. Amie; Jessica Tate; Natsumi Kasai; Yuka Kanemura; Dong-Hyun Kim; Brian M. Ward; Yoshio Koyanagi; Baek Kim

SAMHD1 is a newly identified anti-HIV host factor that has a dNTP triphosphohydrolase activity and depletes intracellular dNTP pools in non-dividing myeloid cells. Since DNA viruses utilize cellular dNTPs, we investigated whether SAMHD1 limits the replication of DNA viruses in non-dividing myeloid target cells. Indeed, two double stranded DNA viruses, vaccinia and herpes simplex virus type 1, are subject to SAMHD1 restriction in non-dividing target cells in a dNTP dependent manner. Using a thymidine kinase deficient strain of vaccinia virus, we demonstrate a greater restriction of viral replication in non-dividing cells expressing SAMHD1. Therefore, this study suggests that SAMHD1 is a potential innate anti-viral player that suppresses the replication of a wide range of DNA viruses, as well as retroviruses, which infect non-dividing myeloid cells.


Virology | 2016

SAMHD1 controls cell cycle status, apoptosis and HIV-1 infection in monocytic THP-1 cells

Serena Bonifati; Michele B. Daly; Corine St. Gelais; Sun Hee Kim; Joseph A. Hollenbaugh; Caitlin Shepard; Edward M. Kennedy; Dong-Hyun Kim; Raymond F. Schinazi; Baek Kim; Li Wu

SAMHD1 limits HIV-1 infection in non-dividing myeloid cells by decreasing intracellular dNTP pools. HIV-1 restriction by SAMHD1 in these cells likely prevents activation of antiviral immune responses and modulates viral pathogenesis, thus highlighting a critical role of SAMHD1 in HIV-1 physiopathology. Here, we explored the function of SAMHD1 in regulating cell proliferation, cell cycle progression and apoptosis in monocytic THP-1 cells. Using the CRISPR/Cas9 technology, we generated THP-1 cells with stable SAMHD1 knockout. We found that silencing of SAMHD1 in cycling cells stimulates cell proliferation, redistributes cell cycle population in the G1/G0 phase and reduces apoptosis. These alterations correlated with increased dNTP levels and more efficient HIV-1 infection in dividing SAMHD1 knockout cells relative to control. Our results suggest that SAMHD1, through its dNTPase activity, affects cell proliferation, cell cycle distribution and apoptosis, and emphasize a key role of SAMHD1 in the interplay between cell cycle regulation and HIV-1 infection.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Anti-HIV Host Factor SAMHD1 Regulates Viral Sensitivity to Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors via Modulation of Cellular Deoxyribonucleoside Triphosphate (dNTP) Levels

Sarah M. Amie; Michele B. Daly; Erin Noble; Raymond F. Schinazi; Robert A. Bambara; Baek Kim

Background: SAMHD1 is an enzyme that maintains low dNTP concentrations in macrophages. Results: Depletion of SAMHD1 decreases HIV-1 sensitivity to nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) in macrophages, but does not significantly alter sensitivity in T cells. Conclusion: SAMHD1 expression levels in macrophages directly impact the efficacy of NRTIs by modulating cellular dNTP concentrations. Significance: SAMHD1 controls HIV-1 sensitivity to NRTIs. Newly identified anti-HIV host factor, SAMHD1, restricts replication of lentiviruses such as HIV-1, HIV-2, and simian immunodeficiency virus in macrophages by enzymatically hydrolyzing and depleting cellular dNTPs, which are the substrates of viral DNA polymerases. HIV-2 and some simian immunodeficiency viruses express viral protein X (VPX), which counteracts SAMHD1 and elevates cellular dNTPs, enhancing viral replication in macrophages. Because nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs), the most commonly used anti-HIV drugs, compete against cellular dNTPs for incorporation into proviral DNA, we tested whether SAMHD1 directly affects the efficacy of NRTIs in inhibiting HIV-1. We found that reduction of SAMHD1 levels with the use of virus-like particles expressing Vpx- and SAMHD1-specific shRNA subsequently elevates cellular dNTPs and significantly decreases HIV-1 sensitivity to various NRTIs in macrophages. However, virus-like particles +Vpx treatment of activated CD4+ T cells only minimally reduced NRTI efficacy. Furthermore, with the use of HPLC, we could not detect SAMHD1-mediated hydrolysis of NRTI-triphosphates, verifying that the reduced sensitivity of HIV-1 to NRTIs upon SAMHD1 degradation is most likely caused by the elevation in cellular dNTPs.


Cell Reports | 2017

SAMHD1 Promotes DNA End Resection to Facilitate DNA Repair by Homologous Recombination

Waaqo Daddacha; Allyson E. Koyen; Amanda J. Bastien; PamelaSara E. Head; Vishal R. Dhere; Geraldine Nabeta; Erin C. Connolly; Erica Werner; Matthew Z. Madden; Michele B. Daly; Elizabeth V. Minten; Donna R. Whelan; Ashley J. Schlafstein; Hui Zhang; Roopesh Anand; Christine Doronio; Allison E. Withers; Caitlin Shepard; Ranjini K. Sundaram; Xingming Deng; William S. Dynan; Ya Wang; Ranjit S. Bindra; Petr Cejka; Eli Rothenberg; Paul W. Doetsch; Baek Kim; David S. Yu

DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair by homologous recombination (HR) is initiated by CtIP/MRN-mediated DNA end resection to maintain genome integrity. SAMHD1 is a dNTP triphosphohydrolase, which restricts HIV-1 infection, and mutations are associated with Aicardi-Goutières syndrome and cancer. We show that SAMHD1 has a dNTPase-independent function in promoting DNA end resection to facilitate DSB repair by HR. SAMHD1 deficiency or Vpx-mediated degradation causes hypersensitivity to DSB-inducing agents, and SAMHD1 is recruited to DSBs. SAMHD1 complexes with CtIP via a conserved C-terminal domain and recruits CtIP to DSBs to facilitate end resection and HR. Significantly, a cancer-associated mutant with impaired CtIP interaction, but not dNTPase-inactive SAMHD1, fails to rescue the end resection impairment of SAMHD1 depletion. Our findings define a dNTPase-independent function for SAMHD1 in HR-mediated DSB repair by facilitating CtIP accrual to promote DNA end resection, providing insight into how SAMHD1 promotes genome integrity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Phosphoinositide 3-kinase inhibitors induce DNA damage through nucleoside depletion

Ashish Juvekar; Hai Hu; Sina Yadegarynia; Costas A. Lyssiotis; Soumya Ullas; Evan C. Lien; Gary Bellinger; Jaekyoung Son; Rosanna C. Hok; Pankaj Seth; Michele B. Daly; Baek Kim; Ralph Scully; John M. Asara; Lewis C. Cantley; Gerburg Wulf

Significance Mutations in the PI3K pathway are highly prevalent in cancers, and isoform-specific and pan-PI3K inhibitors have entered clinical trials in both solid and hematologic malignancies. The PI3K δ-specific inhibitor idelalisib (in combination with rituximab) was recently approved for the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia. However, identifying tumor types and biological mechanisms that predict for response to PI3K inhibitors as single agents or in combination has been a challenge. Our data indicate that PI3K inhibitors induce DNA damage in tumors that have defects in DNA damage-repair pathways and that they do so by impairing the production of Rib phosphate and amino acids needed for deoxynucleotide synthesis. We previously reported that combining a phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitor with a poly-ADP Rib polymerase (PARP)-inhibitor enhanced DNA damage and cell death in breast cancers that have genetic aberrations in BRCA1 and TP53. Here, we show that enhanced DNA damage induced by PI3K inhibitors in this mutational background is a consequence of impaired production of nucleotides needed for DNA synthesis and DNA repair. Inhibition of PI3K causes a reduction in all four nucleotide triphosphates, whereas inhibition of the protein kinase AKT is less effective than inhibition of PI3K in suppressing nucleotide synthesis and inducing DNA damage. Carbon flux studies reveal that PI3K inhibition disproportionately affects the nonoxidative pentose phosphate pathway that delivers Rib-5-phosphate required for base ribosylation. In vivo in a mouse model of BRCA1-linked triple-negative breast cancer (K14-Cre BRCA1f/fp53f/f), the PI3K inhibitor BKM120 led to a precipitous drop in DNA synthesis within 8 h of drug treatment, whereas DNA synthesis in normal tissues was less affected. In this mouse model, combined PI3K and PARP inhibition was superior to either agent alone to induce durable remissions of established tumors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Host SAMHD1 Protein Promotes HIV-1 Recombination in Macrophages

Laura A. Nguyen; Dong-Hyun Kim; Michele B. Daly; Kevin C. Allan; Baek Kim

Background: Delaying DNA synthesis kinetics of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase by lowering dNTP concentrations elevates biochemical RNA template switch. Results: Degradation of SAMHD1 by Vpx, which increases dNTP levels, reduces HIV-1 template switching in macrophages, but not in CD4+ T cells. Conclusion: Altering cellular dNTP levels directly affects in vivo HIV-1 template switching. Significance: Cellular dNTP abundance controlled by SAMHD1 contributes to HIV-1 template switching in macrophages. Template switching can occur during the reverse transcription of HIV-1. Deoxynucleotide triphosphate (dNTP) concentrations have been biochemically shown to impact HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT)-mediated strand transfer. Lowering the dNTP concentrations promotes RT pausing and RNA template degradation by RNase H activity of the RT, subsequently leading to strand transfer. Terminally differentiated/nondividing macrophages, which serve as a key HIV-1 reservoir, contain extremely low dNTP concentrations (20–50 nm), which results from the cellular dNTP hydrolyzing sterile α motif and histidine aspartic domain containing protein 1 (SAMHD1) protein, when compared with activated CD4+ T cells (2–5 μm). In this study, we first observed that HIV-1 template switching efficiency was nearly doubled in human primary macrophages when compared with activated CD4+ T cells. Second, SAMHD1 degradation by viral protein X (Vpx), which elevates cellular dNTP concentrations, decreased HIV-1 template switching efficiency in macrophages to the levels comparable with CD4+ T cells. Third, differentiated SAMHD1 shRNA THP-1 cells have a 2-fold increase in HIV-1 template switching efficiency. Fourth, SAMHD1 degradation by Vpx did not alter HIV-1 template switching efficiency in activated CD4+ T cells. Finally, the HIV-1 V148I RT mutant that is defective in dNTP binding and has DNA synthesis delay promoted RT stand transfer when compared with wild type RT, particularly at low dNTP concentrations. Here, we report that SAMHD1 regulation of the dNTP concentrations influences HIV-1 template switching efficiency, particularly in macrophages.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Restricted 5′-End Gap Repair of HIV-1 Integration Due to Limited Cellular dNTP Concentrations in Human Primary Macrophages

Sarah K. Van Cor-Hosmer; Dong-Hyun Kim; Michele B. Daly; Waaqo Daddacha; Baek Kim

Background: The cellular DNA repair machinery completes the 5′-end gap repair of HIV-1 integration. Results: The 5′-end DNA gap repair of HIV-1 integration depends on dNTP availability in macrophages, monocytes, and CD4+ T cells. Conclusion: 5′-End DNA gap repair is a rate-limiting step in HIV-1 integration in macrophages and monocytes due to limited cellular dNTPs. Significance: Availability of cellular dNTP and polymerase controls HIV-1 integration kinetics. HIV-1 proviral DNA integration into host chromosomal DNA is only partially completed by the viral integrase, leaving two single-stranded DNA gaps with 5′-end mismatched viral DNA flaps. It has been inferred that these gaps are repaired by the cellular DNA repair machinery. Here, we investigated the efficiency of gap repair at integration sites in different HIV-1 target cell types. First, we found that the general gap repair machinery in macrophages was attenuated compared with that in dividing CD4+ T cells. In fact, the repair in macrophages was heavily reliant upon host DNA polymerase β (Pol β). Second, we tested whether the poor dNTP availability found in macrophages is responsible for the delayed HIV-1 proviral DNA integration in this cell type because the Km value of Pol β is much higher than the dNTP concentrations found in macrophages. Indeed, with the use of a modified quantitative AluI PCR assay, we demonstrated that the elevation of cellular dNTP concentrations accelerated DNA gap repair in macrophages at HIV-1 proviral DNA integration sites. Finally, we found that human monocytes, which are resistant to HIV-1 infection, exhibited severely restricted gap repair capacity due not only to the very low levels of dNTPs detected but also to the significantly reduced expression of Pol β. Taken together, these results suggest that the low dNTP concentrations found in macrophages and monocytes can restrict the repair steps necessary for HIV-1 integration.


Scientific Reports | 2018

A central role for PI3K-AKT signaling pathway in linking SAMHD1-deficiency to the type I interferon signature

Changhoon Oh; Jeongmin Ryoo; Ki-Won Park; Baek Kim; Michele B. Daly; Dong-Yeon Cho; Kwangseog Ahn

The autoimmune disorder Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS) is characterized by a constitutive type I interferon response. SAMHD1 possesses both dNTPase and RNase activities and mutations in SAMHD1 cause AGS; however, how SAMHD1-deficiency causes the type I interferon response in patients with AGS remains unknown. Here, we show that endogenous RNA substrates accumulated in the absence of SAMHD1 act as a major immunogenic source for the type I interferon response. Reconstitution of SAMHD1-negative human cells with wild-type but not RNase-defective SAMHD1 abolishes spontaneous type I interferon induction. We further identify that the PI3K/AKT/IRF3 signaling pathway is essential for the type I interferon response in SAMHD1-deficient human monocytic cells. Treatment of PI3K or AKT inhibitors dramatically reduces the type I interferon signatures in SAMHD1-deficient cells. Moreover, SAMHD1/AKT1 double knockout relieves the type I interferon signatures to the levels observed for wild-type cells. Identification of AGS-related RNA sensing pathway provides critical insights into the molecular pathogenesis of the type I interferonopathies such as AGS and overlapping autoimmune disorders.


Retrovirology | 2016

Dual anti-HIV mechanism of clofarabine

Michele B. Daly; Megan E. Roth; Laurent Bonnac; J. Maldonado; Jiashu Xie; Christine L. Clouser; Steven E. Patterson; Baek Kim; Louis M. Mansky

AbstractBackground HIV-1 replication kinetics inherently depends on the availability of cellular dNTPs for viral DNA synthesis. In activated CD4+ T cells and other rapidly dividing cells, the concentrations of dNTPs are high and HIV-1 reverse transcription occurs in an efficient manner. In contrast, nondividing cells such as macrophages have lower dNTP pools, which restricts efficient reverse transcription. Clofarabine is an FDA approved ribonucleotide reductase inhibitor, which has shown potent antiretroviral activity in transformed cell lines. Here, we explore the potency, toxicity and mechanism of action of clofarabine in the human primary HIV-1 target cells: activated CD4+ T cells and macrophages. Results Clofarabine is a potent HIV-1 inhibitor in both activated CD4+ T cells and macrophages. Due to its minimal toxicity in macrophages, clofarabine displays a selectivity index over 300 in this nondividing cell type. The anti-HIV-1 activity of clofarabine correlated with a significant decrease in both cellular dNTP levels and viral DNA synthesis. Additionally, we observed that clofarabine triphosphate was directly incorporated into DNA by HIV-1 reverse transcriptase and blocked processive DNA synthesis, particularly at the low dNTP levels found in macrophages.ConclusionsTaken together, these data provide strong mechanistic evidence that clofarabine is a dual action inhibitor of HIV-1 replication that both limits dNTP substrates for viral DNA synthesis and directly inhibits the DNA polymerase activity of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016

5-Azacytidine Enhances the Mutagenesis of HIV-1 by Reduction to 5-Aza-2′-Deoxycytidine

Jonathan M.O. Rawson; Michele B. Daly; Jiashu Xie; Christine L. Clouser; Sean R. Landman; Cavan Reilly; Laurent Bonnac; Baek Kim; Steven E. Patterson; Louis M. Mansky

ABSTRACT 5-Azacytidine (5-aza-C) is a ribonucleoside analog that induces the lethal mutagenesis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) by causing predominantly G-to-C transversions during reverse transcription. 5-Aza-C could potentially act primarily as a ribonucleotide (5-aza-CTP) or as a deoxyribonucleotide (5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine triphosphate [5-aza-dCTP]) during reverse transcription. In order to determine the primary form of 5-aza-C that is active against HIV-1, Illumina sequencing was performed using proviral DNA from cells treated with 5-aza-C or 5-aza-dC. 5-Aza-C and 5-aza-dC were found to induce highly similar patterns of mutation in HIV-1 in terms of the types of mutations observed, the magnitudes of effects, and the distributions of mutations at individual sequence positions. Further, 5-aza-dCTP was detected by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry in cells treated with 5-aza-C, demonstrating that 5-aza-C was a substrate for ribonucleotide reductase. Notably, levels of 5-aza-dCTP were similar in cells treated with equivalent effective concentrations of 5-aza-C or 5-aza-dC. Lastly, HIV-1 reverse transcriptase was found to incorporate 5-aza-CTP in vitro at least 10,000-fold less efficiently than 5-aza-dCTP. Taken together, these data support the model that 5-aza-C enhances the mutagenesis of HIV-1 primarily after reduction to 5-aza-dC, which can then be incorporated during reverse transcription and lead to G-to-C hypermutation. These findings may have important implications for the design of new ribonucleoside analogs directed against retroviruses.

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Jiashu Xie

University of Minnesota

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Cavan Reilly

University of Minnesota

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