5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) is a DNA base created during active DNA demethylation by the recently discovered TET enzymes. 5hmC has essential roles in gene expression and differentiation. Here, we demonstrate that 5hmC also localizes to sites of DNA damage and repair. 5hmC accumulates at damage foci induced by aphidicolin and microirradiation and colocalizes with major DNA damage response proteins 53BP1 and γH2AX, revealing 5hmC as an epigenetic marker of DNA damage. Deficiency for the TET enzymes eliminates damage-induced 5hmC accumulation and elicits chromosome segregation defects in response to replication stress. Our results indicate that the TET enzymes and 5hmC play essential roles in ensuring genome integrity.
Telomeres regulate DNA damage response (DDR) and DNA repair activity at chromosome ends. How telomere macromolecular structure contributes to ATM regulation and its potential dissociation from control over non-homologous end joining (NHEJ)-dependent telomere fusion is of central importance to telomere-dependent cell aging and tumor suppression. Using super-resolution microscopy, we identify that ATM activation at mammalian telomeres with reduced TRF2 or at human telomeres during mitotic arrest occurs specifically with a structural change from telomere loops (t-loops) to linearized telomeres. Additionally, we find the TRFH domain of TRF2 regulates t-loop formation while suppressing ATM activity. Notably, we demonstrate that ATM activation and telomere linearity occur separately from telomere fusion via NHEJ and that linear DDR-positive telomeres can remain resistant to fusion, even during an extended G1 arrest, when NHEJ is most active. Collectively, these results suggest t-loops act as conformational switches that specifically regulate ATM activation independent of telomere mechanisms to inhibit NHEJ.
Maternal hyperglycemia is believed to be the metabolic derangement associated with both early pregnancy loss and congenital malformations in a diabetic pregnancy. Using an in vitro model of embryo exposure to hyperglycemia, this study questioned if increased flux through the hexosamine signaling pathway (HSP), which results in increased embryonic O-linked glycosylation (O-GlcNAcylation), underlies the glucotoxic effects of hyperglycemia during early embryogenesis. Mouse zygotes were randomly allocated to culture treatment groups that included no glucose (no flux through HSP), hyperglycemia (27 mM glucose, excess flux), 0.2 mM glucosamine (GlcN) in the absence of glucose (HSP flux alone), and O-GlcNAcylation levels monitored immunohistochemically. The impact of HSP manipulation on the first differentiation in development, blastocyst formation, was assessed, as were apoptosis and cell number in individual embryos. The enzymes regulating O-GlcNAcylation, and therefore hexosamine signaling, are the beta-linked-O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT) and an O-GlcNAc-selective beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase (O-GlcNAcase). Inhibition of these enzymes has a negative impact on blastocyst formation, demonstrating the importance of this signaling system to developmental potential. The ability of the OGT inhibitor benzyl-2-acetamido-2-deoxy-alpha-D-galactopyranoside (BADGP) to reverse the glucotoxic effects of hyperglycemia on these parameters was also sought. Excess HSP flux arising from a hyperglycemic environment or glucosamine supplementation reduced cell proliferation and blastocyst formation, confirming the criticality of this signaling pathway during early embryogenesis. Inhibition of OGT using BADGP blocked the negative impact of hyperglycemia on blastocyst formation, cell number, and apoptosis. Our results suggest that dysregulation of HSP and O-GlcNAcylation is the mechanism by which the embryotoxic effects of hyperglycemia are manifested during preimplantation development.
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