Selection and the Cell Cycle: Positive Darwinian Selection in a Well-Known DNA Damage Response Pathway

被引:14
|
作者
O'Connell, Mary J. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Dublin City Univ, Bioinformat & Mol Evolut Grp, Sch Biotechnol, Dublin 9, Ireland
[2] Dublin City Univ, Ctr Sci Comp & Complex Syst Modelling SCI SYM, Dublin 9, Ireland
基金
爱尔兰科学基金会;
关键词
Cell cycle; Cancer evolution; Cancer selection; Tumor suppressor; Breast cancer; Positive selection; Adaptive evolution; DNA repair; Vertebrate evolution; CODON-SUBSTITUTION MODELS; CANCER INFORMATION CORE; TUMOR-SUPPRESSOR BRCA1; FANCONI-ANEMIA; BREAST-CANCER; ADAPTIVE EVOLUTION; MUTATION ANALYSIS; LIKELIHOOD METHOD; GENE; PROTEIN;
D O I
10.1007/s00239-010-9399-y
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Cancer is a common occurrence in multi-cellular organisms and is not strictly limited to the elderly in a population. It is therefore possible that individuals with genotypes that protect against early onset cancers have a selective advantage. In this study the patterns of mutation in the proteins of a well-studied DNA damage response pathway have been examined for evidence of adaptive evolutionary change. Using a maximum likelihood framework and the mammalian species phylogeny, together with codon models of evolution, selective pressure variation across the interacting network of proteins has been detected. The presence of signatures of adaptive evolution in BRCA1 and BRCA2 has already been documented but the effect on the entire network of interacting proteins in this damage response pathway has, until now, been unknown. Positive selection is evident throughout the network with a total of 11 proteins out of 15 examined displaying patterns of substitution characteristic of positive selection. It is also shown here that modern human populations display evidence of an ongoing selective sweep in 9 of these DNA damage repair proteins. The results presented here provide the community with new residues that may be relevant to cancer susceptibility while also highlighting those proteins where human and mouse have undergone lineage-specific functional shift. An understanding of this damage response pathway from an evolutionary perspective will undoubtedly contribute to future cancer treatment approaches.
引用
收藏
页码:444 / 457
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] P301L tau mutation leads to alterations of cell cycle, DNA damage response and apoptosis: Evidence for a role of tau in cancer
    Cimini, Sara
    Giaccone, Giorgio
    Tagliavini, Fabrizio
    Costantino, Matteo
    Perego, Paola
    Rossi, Giacomina
    BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2022, 200
  • [42] DNA-damage response network at the crossroads of cell-cycle checkpoints, cellular senescence and apoptosis.
    Schmitt E.
    Paquet C.
    Beauchemin M.
    Bertrand R.
    Journal of Zhejiang University SCIENCE B, 2007, 8 (6): : 377 - 397
  • [43] Review:DNA-damage response network at the crossroads of cell-cycle checkpoints, cellular senescence and apoptosis
    SCHMITT Estelle
    PAQUET Claudie
    BEAUCHEMIN Myriam
    BERTRAND Richard
    Journal of Zhejiang University(Science B:An International Biomedicine & Biotechnology Journal), 2007, (06) : 377 - 397
  • [44] SOCS3 regulates p21 expression and cell cycle arrest in response to DNA damage
    Sitko, John C.
    Yeh, Brian
    Kim, Moonhong
    Zhou, Hong
    Takaesu, Giichi
    Yoshimura, Akihiko
    McBride, William H.
    Jewett, Anahid
    Jamieson, Christina A. M.
    Cacalano, Nicholas A.
    CELLULAR SIGNALLING, 2008, 20 (12) : 2221 - 2230
  • [45] Systems chemo-biology analysis of DNA damage response and cell cycle effects induced by coal exposure
    Torres-Avila, Jose F.
    Espitia-Perez, Lyda
    Bonatto, Diego
    da Silva, Fernanda Rabaioli
    de Oliveira, Iuri Marques
    Silva, Luis F. O.
    Correa, Dione Silva
    Dias, Johnny Ferraz
    da Silva, Juliana
    Pegas Henriques, Joao Antonio
    GENETICS AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2020, 43 (03)
  • [46] A shared DNA-damage-response pathway for induction of stem-cell death by UVB and by gamma irradiation
    Furukawa, T.
    Curtis, M. J.
    Tominey, C. M.
    Duong, Y. H.
    Wilcox, B. W. L.
    Aggoune, D.
    Hays, J. B.
    Britt, A. B.
    DNA REPAIR, 2010, 9 (09) : 940 - 948
  • [47] EBV-LMP1-targeted DNAzyme induces DNA damage and causes cell cycle arrest in LMP1-positive nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells
    Ma, Xiaoqian
    Xu, Zhijie
    Yang, Lifang
    Xiao, Lanbo
    Tang, Min
    Lu, Jingchen
    Xu, San
    Tang, Yiping
    Wen, Xinxian
    Deng, Xingming
    Sun, Lunquan
    Cao, Ya
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY, 2013, 43 (05) : 1541 - 1548
  • [48] DNA damage response (DDR) pathway engagement in cisplatin radiosensitization of non-small cell lung cancer
    Sears, Catherine R.
    Cooney, Sean A.
    Chin-Sinex, Helen
    Mendonca, Marc S.
    Turchi, John J.
    DNA REPAIR, 2016, 40 : 35 - 46
  • [49] An Intimate Alliance of DNA- Damage Response Network with Cell-Cycle Checkpoints Amid Events of Uncontrolled Cellular Proliferation: A Mini-Review
    Chatterjee, Aroni
    Rajarshi, Keshav
    Khan, Rajni
    Ghosh, Hiya
    Kapoor, Sonia
    Ray, Shashikant
    ENDOCRINE METABOLIC & IMMUNE DISORDERS-DRUG TARGETS, 2021, 21 (09) : 1537 - 1543
  • [50] DNA Damage Response Pathways and Cell Cycle Checkpoints in Colorectal Cancer: Current Concepts and Future Perspectives for Targeted Treatment
    Solier, S.
    Zhang, Y. -W.
    Ballestrero, A.
    Pommier, Y.
    Zoppoli, G.
    CURRENT CANCER DRUG TARGETS, 2012, 12 (04) : 356 - 371