Human targeted deletions and biological roles of genes involved in repair of alkylation damage

DNA repair is not a single mechanism found within cells. There exists numerous different DNA repair mechanisms that function within every type of cell. The majority of these mechanisms risk accumulating mutations. However, there are a few repair mechanisms that are known to be error-free and one of...

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Main Author: Ahmad, Alya
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/16247
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-162472019-03-20T15:21:44Z Human targeted deletions and biological roles of genes involved in repair of alkylation damage Ahmad, Alya Cellular biology ALKBH Alkylation damage Direct reversal repair DNA repair DNA repair is not a single mechanism found within cells. There exists numerous different DNA repair mechanisms that function within every type of cell. The majority of these mechanisms risk accumulating mutations. However, there are a few repair mechanisms that are known to be error-free and one of these is direct reversal repair. This study focused on two proteins highly involved in direct reversal DNA repair--ALKBH2 and ALKBH3. Previous studies have shown that in mice, these two proteins play a significant role in preventing and repairing DNA damage due to methylation as well as decreasing the frequency of mutagenic alkyl adducts. The goal of this study was to characterize the roles of the direct reversal repair proteins in human cells. We expected to see a similar phenotype to that of the Alkbh2 and Alkbh3-deficient mice. Telomerase immortalized human skin fibroblasts were targeted for the ALKBH2 and ALKBH3 alleles using a RNA-guided CRISPR-Cas9 construct that was designed to induce double stranded DNA breaks within the exons and disrupt the open reading frame, eliminating protein activity. Isolated clones were analyzed using fragment analysis and DNA sequencing to characterize any alterations in the open reading frame of the genes. Through sequencing analysis, results showed that one clone was successfully targeted for one of the ALKBH3 alleles with a single nucleotide insertion in its sequence, causing a disruption of the open reading frame. Though the ultimate goal of the experiment was not attained, we concluded that HTERTG fibroblasts can be expanded to serve as a model in which to construct targeted human cell lines that have near normal karyotypes. 2016-05-12T14:57:34Z 2016-05-12T14:57:34Z 2015 2016-04-08T20:19:40Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/16247 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Cellular biology
ALKBH
Alkylation damage
Direct reversal repair
DNA repair
spellingShingle Cellular biology
ALKBH
Alkylation damage
Direct reversal repair
DNA repair
Ahmad, Alya
Human targeted deletions and biological roles of genes involved in repair of alkylation damage
description DNA repair is not a single mechanism found within cells. There exists numerous different DNA repair mechanisms that function within every type of cell. The majority of these mechanisms risk accumulating mutations. However, there are a few repair mechanisms that are known to be error-free and one of these is direct reversal repair. This study focused on two proteins highly involved in direct reversal DNA repair--ALKBH2 and ALKBH3. Previous studies have shown that in mice, these two proteins play a significant role in preventing and repairing DNA damage due to methylation as well as decreasing the frequency of mutagenic alkyl adducts. The goal of this study was to characterize the roles of the direct reversal repair proteins in human cells. We expected to see a similar phenotype to that of the Alkbh2 and Alkbh3-deficient mice. Telomerase immortalized human skin fibroblasts were targeted for the ALKBH2 and ALKBH3 alleles using a RNA-guided CRISPR-Cas9 construct that was designed to induce double stranded DNA breaks within the exons and disrupt the open reading frame, eliminating protein activity. Isolated clones were analyzed using fragment analysis and DNA sequencing to characterize any alterations in the open reading frame of the genes. Through sequencing analysis, results showed that one clone was successfully targeted for one of the ALKBH3 alleles with a single nucleotide insertion in its sequence, causing a disruption of the open reading frame. Though the ultimate goal of the experiment was not attained, we concluded that HTERTG fibroblasts can be expanded to serve as a model in which to construct targeted human cell lines that have near normal karyotypes.
author Ahmad, Alya
author_facet Ahmad, Alya
author_sort Ahmad, Alya
title Human targeted deletions and biological roles of genes involved in repair of alkylation damage
title_short Human targeted deletions and biological roles of genes involved in repair of alkylation damage
title_full Human targeted deletions and biological roles of genes involved in repair of alkylation damage
title_fullStr Human targeted deletions and biological roles of genes involved in repair of alkylation damage
title_full_unstemmed Human targeted deletions and biological roles of genes involved in repair of alkylation damage
title_sort human targeted deletions and biological roles of genes involved in repair of alkylation damage
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/16247
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