Characterisation of DNA-Protein Crosslink Repair, a novel DNA repair pathway for protection from accelerated ageing and cancer

Lead Research Organisation: University of Oxford
Department Name: Oncology

Abstract

DNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs) are under-investigated DNA lesions caused by the covalent attachment of proteins to DNA. DPCs are induced by various endogenous chemicals like aldehydes or by chemotherapeutic drugs. Little is known about how cells repair DPCs and thus acquire resistance to DPC-induced chemotherapy. However, the persistence of DPCs causes genomic instability and cancer. We recently discovered a human syndrome (Ruijs-Aalfs or SPARTAN syndrome) related to the defective DPC repair pathway. SPARTAN syndrome is caused by biallelic and monogenic mutations in SPARTAN gene/protein, and is characterised by genomic instability, premature ageing and liver cancer in children (Lessel et al. Nature Genetics 2014). We demonstrated that SPARTAN is a DNA-dependent metalloprotease, which enzymatically (by its metalloprotease activity) removes covalently attached proteins from DNA (Vaz et al. Molecular Cell, 2016). Altogether, our results demonstrate that we have discovered a novel and specialised DNA repair pathway, namely DNA-protein crosslink proteolysis repair pathway that protects humans from cancer and accelerated ageing (Vaz et al., TIBS, 2017).

DPhil project aims to delineate this new DNA-protein crosslink repair pathway by using standard biochemical and cell biological techniques coupled to the state of the art technologies such as Crisper/Cas9 gene editing, mass-spectrometry and super-resolutions microscopy.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Breast Cancer Now - Primarily my data was used for this grant
Amount £199,662 (GBP)
Funding ID 2019DecPR1406 
Organisation Breast Cancer Now 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2020 
End 04/2023
 
Description Dragomir (Chris Lord) 
Organisation Institute of Cancer Research UK
Department Breakthrough Toby Robins Breast Cancer Research Centre
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We are working on a project with the hopeful outcome of me as a co-first-authour paper as was decided at the projects conception.
Collaborator Contribution They are contributing in this collaboration to produce data alongside myself. We are in frequent correspondence.
Impact Not yet.
Start Year 2019