4.7 Article

Reactive oxygen species induce Cys106-mediated anti-parallel HMGB1 dimerization that protects against DNA damage

Journal

REDOX BIOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.redox.2021.101858

Keywords

HMGB1; Reactive oxygen species; Dimerization; DNA damage; Bimolecular fluorescence complementation assay; Fluorescence resonance energy transfer

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korean government [2017R1A2B3006704, 2019R1A6A1A03032869, 2019R1I1 A1A01058308]
  2. Research Center Program of Institute for Basic Science (IBS) in Korea [IBS-R026-D1]

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Oxidative stress induces HMGB1 protein dimerization, which enhances DNA stability by binding to and protecting it from free radical damage. Dimerization of HMGB1 is positively regulated by CuCl2 and H2O2, while mutation prevents dimer formation.
Oxidative stress can induce covalent disulfide bond formation between protein-protein thiol groups and generate hydroxyl free radicals that damage DNA. HMGB1 is a DNA chaperone and damage-associated molecular pattern molecule. As a redox-sensitive protein, HMGB1 contains three cysteine residues: Cys23, Cys45, and Cys106. In this study, we focused on the relationship between HMGB1 dimerization and DNA stabilization under oxidative stress conditions. HMGB1 dimerization was positively modulated by CuCl2 and H2O2. Mutation of the Cys106 residue blocked dimer formation. Treatment of HEK293T cells with CuCl2 and H2O2 enhanced the oxidative self-dimerization of HMGB1, whereas this dimerization was inhibited in mutant HMGB1(C106A) cells. Furthermore, we performed a bimolecular fluorescence complementation assay to visualize Cys106 oxidation-induced HMGB1 dimerization in live cells exposed to oxidative stress and were able to reproduce the dimerization effect of HMGB1 in fluorescence resonance energy transfer analysis. Interestingly, dimerized HMGB1 bound to DNA with higher affinity than monomeric HMGB1. Dimerized HMGB1 protected DNA from damage due to hydroxyl free radicals and prevented cell death. In conclusion, dimerized HMGB1 may play a regulatory role in DNA stabilization under oxidative stress.

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