4.6 Article

The Comet Assay in Drosophila: A Tool to Study Interactions between DNA Repair Systems in DNA Damage Responses In Vivo and Ex Vivo

Journal

CELLS
Volume 12, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells12151979

Keywords

in vivo comet assay; ex vivo comet assay; DNA damage response; Drosophila melanogaster; NER; dmPolQ; mus308; mus201; mus308 and OK strains; MMS

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This study used Drosophila to investigate the interactions between DNA damage responses and repair pathways. The findings showed that both nucleotide excision repair and dmPolQ pathways had an additive effect on the response to MMS-induced DNA damage. The results suggest that Drosophila could be an excellent model for studying interactions between repair pathways.
The comet assay in Drosophila has been used in the last few years to study DNA damage responses (DDR) in different repair-mutant strains and to compare them to analyze DNA repair. We have used this approach to study interactions between DNA repair pathways in vivo. Additionally, we have implemented an ex vivo comet assay, in which nucleoids from treated and untreated cells were incubated ex vivo with cell-free protein extracts from individuals with distinct repair capacities. Four strains were used: wild-type OregonK (OK), nucleotide excision repair mutant mus201, dmPolQ protein mutant mus308, and the double mutant mus201;mus308. Methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) was used as a genotoxic agent. Both approaches were performed with neuroblasts from third-instar larvae; they detected the effects of the NER and dmPolQ pathways on the DDR to MMS and that they act additively in this response. Additionally, the ex vivo approach quantified that mus201, mus308, and the double mutant mus201;mus308 strains presented, respectively, 21.5%, 52.9%, and 14.8% of OK strain activity over MMS-induced damage. Considering the homology between mammals and Drosophila in repair pathways, the detected additive effect might be extrapolated even to humans, demonstrating that Drosophila might be an excellent model to study interactions between repair pathways.

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