Removing a gene involved in repairing damaged DNA causes
metabolic syndrome
Removing a gene involved in repairing damaged DNA causes
mice to develop the metabolic syndrome,researchers at
Oregon Health & Science University have discovered.
Scientists at OHSU, the University of Texas Medical
Branch and the University of Alabama found that
generating mice that lack the gene encoding the DNA
repair enzyme NEIL1 causes them to develop severe
obesity and reach nearly twice the weight of their
normal counterparts. The mice, according to the study
appearing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, also had enlarged, fatty yellow livers,
insulin levels four times higher than normal, elevated
levels of fat cell byproducts, and many internal organs
almost entirely encased in thick pads of fatty tissue.
The results are the first to link DNA repair with the
metabolic syndrome, and they suggest an important role
for the NEIL1 gene product in the prevention of the
diseases associated with the disorder, including
obesity, hypertension, high cholesterol, insulin
resistance and kidney disease.
"So if there are catalytically compromised forms of
NEIL1 within the U.S. population, these people will be
predicted to be at increased risk for developing the
metabolic syndrome," a disease believed to affect more
than 40 million Americans, said R. Stephen Lloyd, Ph.D.,
senior scientist at OHSU's Center for Research on
Occupational and Environmental Toxicology (CROET) and
co-author of the study.
Lloyd and his colleagues originally discovered the
NEIL1-deficient mouse's propensity for developing the
metabolic disorder about two years ago. Their interest
in NEIL1 was initiated by their efforts to clone and
crystallize homologs to the Escherichia coli
endonuclease VIII gene. E. coli endonuclease VIII is
part of a pathway of enzymes involved in repairing DNA
damaged by free radicals that trigger oxidative stress
on cell molecules. As a consequence of these studies,
the Lloyd laboratory found human homologs to the
bacterial repair enzyme and immediately began
constructing the repair-deficient mice.
"If you have oxidative stress inside the cell, then the
bases in the DNA can become damaged, and the
responsibility of this whole group of enzymes is
essentially to monitor the entire genome, looking for
genomic bases that have been oxidatively damaged," Lloyd
explained. "They have the responsibility of then
removing the damaged bases, which initiates a process by
which the cell puts in a normal piece of DNA where the
damaged DNA was. This happens every second of your
life."
After breeding several generations of NEIL1 "knock-out"
mice, Lloyd's colleague and the study's lead author,
Vladimir Vartanian, Ph.D., found that the mice lacking
the enzyme reached weights of between 45 and 52 grams at
age 7 months, while normal mice weighed in at only 28
grams. They also were extremely lethargic, their hair
was turning gray, and some were even going bald.
And there were gender differences. "The NEIL1 knock-out
males throughout all of our studies usually show a more
severe form of the disease and earlier onset of the
disease than the females. We have consistently seen
this," Lloyd said. "The female has disease, but it's not
nearly to the same severity."
Previous studies have suggested that because there are
increased levels of NEIL1 during the synthesis or "S"
phase of the cell division cycle, during which DNA is
replicated before the cell actually divides, NEIL1 is
important to replication-associated DNA repair. In
addition, NEIL1 has been shown to be localized in both
the cell's nucleus and its power plant, the
mitochondria, pointing to its likely involvement in the
overall maintenance of the genome's stability. Other
investigators in the field have discovered that NEIL1
may be important in the repair of actively transcribed
genes.
This means mutations in the NEIL1 gene, or the gene's
absence altogether, could have a catastrophic effect on
the body's ability to restore DNA to its undamaged
state.
"Our analysis is that the inability to repair damage to
the genetic material, whether it is in the nucleus or
whether it's in the mitochondria, is what's leading to a
destabilization of a normal metabolic process," Lloyd
said. "That then begins to cascade and ultimately
results in the symptoms that are consistent with the
metabolic syndrome."
Lloyd says he hopes to study individuals suffering from
the metabolic syndrome with the goal of someday
developing a genetic screen for the disease. He also
wants to examine ways to delay the onset of symptoms,
such as increasing the expression of the NEIL1 gene or
dampening oxidative stress to the cells that damages
their DNA. Such techniques could one day become
therapies.
"One may be able to develop a diagnostic method to do
early screening," Lloyd said. "Or there could be a drug
discovery mechanism in which you enhance the
transcription process (of NEIL1) and just make more.
Maybe you only have one good copy. Fine. Maybe we can
upregulate that one."
More importantly, "What we think this publication is
going to do is add one more complexity to the potential
mechanisms by which you could get to disease," he said.