This thesis is focused on the development and utilisation of chemical and biological tools to probe the function of modified bases in DNA with specific exploration of the less well-studied T-modifications: 5-hmU, 5-fU and Base J. LCMS/MS techniques are first utilised to enable the accurate global quantification of T-modifications (5-hmU, 5-fU and Base J) in both trypanosomatids and mammalian DNA. A chemical affinity-enrichment sequencing method for the T-modifications is next described, which allows their chemoselective tagging over their C-modification counterparts. DNA fragments containing 5-fU are selectively tagged and enriched via oxime, hydrazine or benzimidazole formation using a biotinylated probe, and DNA fragments containing 5-hmU can be first chemically oxidised to 5-fU using KRuO4. .Proof-of-principle T-modification enrichment is demonstrated by DNA sequencing. In the following chapter, sequencing methods are employed to investigate the role of T-modifications in both trypanosomatids and mammalian samples. In T.Brucei, Base J formation is probed by artificial incorporation of 5-hmU and subsequent Base J chemical sequencing. Base J is preferentially formed or depleted at certain genomic loci; suggesting that Base J formation is sequence-specific. This may imply a distinct role for the 5-hmU sites which are not further glucosylated. Next, 5-hmU enrichment sequencing is performed in SMUG1 knockdown HEK293T cells to determine the genomic location of 5-hmU in mammals. An increase in 5-hmU loci is observed upon SMUG1 knockdown. 5-hmU enriched regions are found to be T-rich and depleted in exons and promoters. Furthermore, 5-hmU sites show poor overlap with known TET-enzyme binding sites, indicating that 5-hmU is formed via a TET-independent mechanism in HEK293T cells. Next, mass spectrometry-based proteomics studies are utilised to determine 5-fU protein-binders in mammals. Pulldown of proteins using biotinylated baits enables the identification of proteins which are enriched or suppressed in the presence of the 5-fU modification compared to a non-modified control. Enriched proteins include those associated with DNA-damage, consistent with the current understanding that 5-fU is a product of oxidative damage in mammalian DNA. Finally, a mechanistic insight into the effect of formylated bases on nucleosomal structure is described. Schiff base formation between formylated nucleobases and histone protein lysine side-chains is demonstrated. This provides a molecular mechanism for the association of 5-fC with increased nucleosomal occupancy in vivo.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:744429 |
Date | January 2017 |
Creators | Hardisty, Robyn Elizabeth |
Contributors | Balasubramanian, Shankar |
Publisher | University of Cambridge |
Source Sets | Ethos UK |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
Source | https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/271807 |
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