Peter J. McHugh
John Radcliffe Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Peter J. McHugh.
The EMBO Journal | 2006
Sovan Sarkar; Adelina A. Davies; Helle D. Ulrich; Peter J. McHugh
The repair mechanisms acting on DNA interstrand crosslinks (ICLs) in eukaryotes are poorly understood. Here, we provide evidence for a pathway of ICL processing that uses components from both nucleotide excision repair (NER) and translesion synthesis (TLS) and predominates during the G1 phase of the yeast cell cycle. Our results suggest that repair is initiated by the NER apparatus and is followed by a thwarted attempt at gap‐filling by the replicative Polymerase δ, which likely stalls at the site of the remaining crosslinked oligonucleotide. This in turn leads to ubiquitination of PCNA and recruitment of the damage‐tolerant Polymerase ζ that can perform TLS. The ICL repair factor Pso2 acts downstream of the incision step and is not required for Polymerase ζ activation. We show that this combination of NER and TLS is the only pathway of ICL repair available to the cell in G1 phase and is essential for viability in the presence of DNA crosslinks.
Genes & Development | 2011
Anderson T. Wang; Blanka Sengerová; Emma Cattell; Takabumi Inagawa; Janet M. Hartley; Konstantinos Kiakos; N. Burgess-Brown; Lonnie P. Swift; Jacqueline H. Enzlin; Christopher J. Schofield; O. Gileadi; John A. Hartley; Peter J. McHugh
One of the major DNA interstrand cross-link (ICL) repair pathways in mammalian cells is coupled to replication, but the mechanistic roles of the critical factors involved remain largely elusive. Here, we show that purified human SNM1A (hSNM1A), which exhibits a 5-3 exonuclease activity, can load from a single DNA nick and digest past an ICL on its substrate strand. hSNM1A-depleted cells are ICL-sensitive and accumulate replication-associated DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), akin to ERCC1-depleted cells. These DSBs are Mus81-induced, indicating that replication fork cleavage by Mus81 results from the failure of the hSNM1A- and XPF-ERCC1-dependent ICL repair pathway. Our results reveal how collaboration between hSNM1A and XPF-ERCC1 is necessary to initiate ICL repair in replicating human cells.
Chemistry & Biology | 2013
G Nguyen; Thomas S. Dexheimer; Andrew S. Rosenthal; Wai Kit Chu; Dharmendra Kumar Singh; Georgina Mosedale; Csanád Z. Bachrati; Lena Schultz; Masaaki Sakurai; P. Savitsky; Mika Abu; Peter J. McHugh; Vilhelm A. Bohr; Curtis C. Harris; Ajit Jadhav; O. Gileadi; David J. Maloney; Anton Simeonov; Ian D. Hickson
The Blooms syndrome protein, BLM, is a member of the conserved RecQ helicase family. Although cell lines lacking BLM exist, these exhibit progressive genomic instability that makes distinguishing primary from secondary effects of BLM loss problematic. In order to be able to acutely disable BLM function in cells, we undertook a high throughput screen of a chemical compound library for small molecule inhibitors of BLM. We present ML216, a potent inhibitor of the DNA unwinding activity of BLM. ML216 shows cell-based activity and can induce sister chromatid exchanges, enhance the toxicity of aphidicolin, and exert antiproliferative activity in cells expressing BLM, but not those lacking BLM. These data indicate that ML216 shows strong selectivity for BLM in cultured cells. We discuss the potential utility of such a BLM-targeting compound as an anticancer agent.
Cell Cycle | 2006
Peter J. McHugh; Sovan Sarkar
DNA interstrand cross-links (ICLs) present a formidable challenge to the cellular repair apparatus, but to date ICL repair pathways have proved difficult to dissect genetically. It now appears that this is partly the result of a high degree of cell cycle phase selectivity in the choice of ICL pathway employed. Here we review recent results showing that Polymerase ζ, aspecialised translesion polymerase, plays an important role during ICL repair in G1 phase yeast cells, and that PCNA modification by ubiquitin is a key regulator of its activity. Given that this reaction can occur outside the context of S-phase, these results imply a more general role for PCNA modification in the control of DNA repair pathways through the cell cycle, which is dependent on the type of damage or repair intermediate encountered.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2011
Thomas M. Ashton; Hocine W. Mankouri; Anna Heidenblut; Peter J. McHugh; Ian D. Hickson
ABSTRACT The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rmi1 protein is a component of the highly conserved Sgs1-Top3-Rmi1 complex. Deletion of SGS1, TOP3, or RMI1 is synthetically lethal when combined with the loss of the Mus81-Mms4 or Slx1-Slx4 endonucleases, which have been implicated in Holliday junction (HJ) resolution. To investigate the causes of this synthetic lethality, we isolated a temperature-sensitive mutant of the RMI1 strain, referred to as the rmi1-1 mutant. At the restrictive temperature, this mutant phenocopies an rmi1Δ strain but behaves like the wild type at the permissive temperature. Following a transient exposure to methyl methanesulfonate, rmi1-1 mutants accumulate unprocessed homologous recombination repair (HRR) intermediates. These intermediates are slowly resolved at the restrictive temperature, revealing a redundant resolution activity when Rmi1 is impaired. This resolution depends on Mus81-Mms4 but not on either Slx1-Slx4 or another HJ resolvase, Yen1. Similar results were also observed when Top3 function was impaired. We propose that the Sgs1-Top3-Rmi1 complex constitutes the main pathway for the processing of HJ-containing HRR intermediates but that Mus81-Mms4 can also resolve these intermediates.
Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis | 2010
Emma Cattell; Blanka Sengerová; Peter J. McHugh
Efficient interstrand crosslink (ICL) repair in yeast depends on the Pso2/Snm1 protein. Pso2 is a member of the highly conserved metallo‐β‐lactamase structural family of nucleases. Mammalian cells possess three SNM1/Pso2 related proteins, SNM1A, SNM1B/Apollo, and SNM1C/Artemis. Evidence that SNM1A and SNM1B contribute to ICL repair is mounting, whereas Artemis appears to primarily contribute to non‐ICL repair pathways, particularly some double‐strand break repair events. Yeast Pso2 and all three mammalian SNM1‐family proteins have been shown to possess nuclease activity. Here, we review the biochemical, genetic, and cellular evidence for the SNM1 family as DNA repair factors, focusing on ICL repair. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 2010.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016
Jürgen Brem; Sander S. van Berkel; D. Zollman; Sook Lee; O. Gileadi; Peter J. McHugh; Timothy R. Walsh; Michael A. McDonough; Christopher J. Schofield
ABSTRACT β-Lactams are the most successful antibacterials, but their effectiveness is threatened by resistance, most importantly by production of serine- and metallo-β-lactamases (MBLs). MBLs are of increasing concern because they catalyze the hydrolysis of almost all β-lactam antibiotics, including recent-generation carbapenems. Clinically useful serine-β-lactamase inhibitors have been developed, but such inhibitors are not available for MBLs. l-Captopril, which is used to treat hypertension via angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition, has been reported to inhibit MBLs by chelating the active site zinc ions via its thiol(ate). We report systematic studies on B1 MBL inhibition by all four captopril stereoisomers. High-resolution crystal structures of three MBLs (IMP-1, BcII, and VIM-2) in complex with either the l- or d-captopril stereoisomer reveal correlations between the binding mode and inhibition potency. The results will be useful in the design of MBL inhibitors with the breadth of selectivity required for clinical application against carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae and other organisms causing MBL-mediated resistant infections.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2010
Sovan Sarkar; Rhian Kiely; Peter J. McHugh
Ino80 facilitates restoration of nucleosome structure during NER-mediated repair of UV-induced lesions.
PLOS Genetics | 2012
Thomas A. Ward; Zuzana Dudášová; Sovan Sarkar; Mangesh Bhide; Danuša Vlasáková; Miroslav Chovanec; Peter J. McHugh
Fanconi anemia (FA) is a devastating genetic disease, associated with genomic instability and defects in DNA interstrand cross-link (ICL) repair. The FA repair pathway is not thought to be conserved in budding yeast, and although the yeast Mph1 helicase is a putative homolog of human FANCM, yeast cells disrupted for MPH1 are not sensitive to ICLs. Here, we reveal a key role for Mph1 in ICL repair when the Pso2 exonuclease is inactivated. We find that the yeast FANCM ortholog Mph1 physically and functionally interacts with Mgm101, a protein previously implicated in mitochondrial DNA repair, and the MutSα mismatch repair factor (Msh2-Msh6). Co-disruption of MPH1, MGM101, MSH6, or MSH2 with PSO2 produces a lesion-specific increase in ICL sensitivity, the elevation of ICL-induced chromosomal rearrangements, and persistence of ICL-associated DNA double-strand breaks. We find that Mph1-Mgm101-MutSα directs the ICL-induced recruitment of Exo1 to chromatin, and we propose that Exo1 is an alternative 5′-3′ exonuclease utilised for ICL repair in the absence of Pso2. Moreover, ICL-induced Rad51 chromatin loading is delayed when both Pso2 and components of the Mph1-Mgm101-MutSα and Exo1 pathway are inactivated, demonstrating that the homologous recombination stages of ICL repair are inhibited. Finally, the FANCJ- and FANCP-related factors Chl1 and Slx4, respectively, are also components of the genetic pathway controlled by Mph1-Mgm101-MutSα. Together this suggests that a prototypical FA–related ICL repair pathway operates in budding yeast, which acts redundantly with the pathway controlled by Pso2, and is required for the targeting of Exo1 to chromatin to execute ICL repair.
Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2016
Ilaria Pettinati; Jürgen Brem; Sook Lee; Peter J. McHugh; Christopher J. Schofield
The αββα metallo β-lactamase (MBL) fold (MBLf) was first observed in bacterial enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of almost all β-lactam antibiotics, but is now known to be widely distributed. The MBL core protein fold is present in human enzymes with diverse biological roles, including cell detoxification pathways and enabling resistance to clinically important anticancer medicines. Human (h)MBLf enzymes can bind metals, including zinc and iron ions, and catalyze a range of chemically interesting reactions, including both redox (e.g., ETHE1) and hydrolytic processes (e.g., Glyoxalase II, SNM1 nucleases, and CPSF73). With a view to promoting basic research on MBLf enzymes and their medicinal targeting, here we summarize current knowledge of the mechanisms and roles of these important molecules.