Cloning of a human homolog of the yeast OGG1 gene that is involved in the repair of oxidative DNA damage

K Arai, K Morishita, K Shinmura, T Kohno, SR Kim… - Oncogene, 1997 - nature.com
K Arai, K Morishita, K Shinmura, T Kohno, SR Kim, T Nohmi, M Taniwaki, S Ohwada…
Oncogene, 1997nature.com
We report the cloning of a human homolog of the yeast OGG1 gene, which encodes a DNA
glycosylase that excises an oxidatively damaged form of guanine, 8-hydroxyguanine (also
known as 7, 8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine). Since the deduced amino acid sequence (68 amino
acids) of a human expressed sequence tag, N55394, matched a short stretch of yeast OGG1
protein with greater than 40% amino acid identity, a full length cDNA clone was isolated from
a HeLa cell cDNA library with the N55394 clone as a probe. The cDNA clone encodes a …
Abstract
We report the cloning of a human homolog of the yeast OGG1 gene, which encodes a DNA glycosylase that excises an oxidatively damaged form of guanine, 8-hydroxyguanine (also known as 7, 8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine). Since the deduced amino acid sequence (68 amino acids) of a human expressed sequence tag, N55394, matched a short stretch of yeast OGG1 protein with greater than 40% amino acid identity, a full length cDNA clone was isolated from a HeLa cell cDNA library with the N55394 clone as a probe. The cDNA clone encodes a predicted protein of 345 amino acids which is homologous to yeast OGG1 protein throughout the entire polypeptide sequence and shares 38% amino acid identity with yeast OGG1 protein. Moreover, we found that both a human homolog and yeast OGG1 protein possess two distinct DNA binding motifs, a helix-hairpin-helix (HhH) motif and a C 2 H 2 zinc finger like motif, and a domain homologous to human and E. coli MutY proteins. Expression of a human homolog suppressed spontaneous mutagenesis of an E. coli (mutM mutY) mutant as in the case of yeast OGG1 protein. The gene was ubiquitously expressed in a variety of human organs and mapped to chromosome 3p26. 2. These results strongly suggest that the gene isolated here is a human counterpart of the yeast OGGI gene and is involved in the repair of oxidative DNA damage in human cells.
nature.com