从着色性干皮病到Dirk Bootsma对人类遗传学的生物钟贡献。

Jan H.J. Hoeijmakers
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引用次数: 8

摘要

本文纪念德克·布茨玛对人类遗传学的多项贡献。在他的帆船“de Losbol”上的一次科学“Bootsma”之旅中,我们参观了弗里斯兰的湖泊和运河沿岸的各种风景,经过了Dirk Bootsma科学作品的亮点。从他的家乡“de Fluessen”出发,他的博士工作是关于x射线和紫外线对细胞周期进程的影响,我们将前往他的团队通过细胞杂交在人类染色体上定位基因的开创性努力。接下来,我们将探索由Bootsma团队使用的细胞杂交技术,最终在涉及肿瘤发生的第一个染色体断点之一的分子克隆中达到高潮:bcr-abl融合基因负责慢性髓细胞白血病。这一开创性的成就使得早期检测和非常有希望的治疗干预的新方法得以发展。地平线上的一系列亮点构成了他的团队对DNA修复领域的贡献,从发现修复综合征着色性干皮病(XP)的遗传异质性开始,然后是大量人类修复基因的克隆。这导致发现DNA修复在进化中是高度保守的,使得来自酵母的知识与哺乳动物相关,反之亦然。此外,它还解决了几种修复综合征的分子基础,并允许对编码蛋白进行功能分析。另一个里程碑是与Jean-Marc Egly等人在斯特拉斯堡合作发现了DNA修复和转录启动之间通过双功能TFIIH复合体的惊人联系。这为许多令人困惑的临床特征提供了解释,并引发了人类遗传学中的一个新概念:修复/转录综合征的存在。许多携带修复途径缺陷的小鼠突变体的产生产生了有价值的模型,用于评估DNA修复的临床相关性,包括致癌作用和鉴定DNA损伤与早衰之间的联系。他的团队还通过分析活细胞的修复和转录,开辟了一个引人入胜的细胞生物学领域。最后一个令人惊讶的进化转折是,人们发现,为光依赖性修复紫外线诱导的DNA损伤而设计的光解酶,似乎被用来驱动哺乳动物的生物钟。后者表明是时候回到“de Fluessen”了,在那里我们将简要地考虑Dirk Bootsma对荷兰科学的贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
From xeroderma pigmentosum to the biological clock contributions of Dirk Bootsma to human genetics

This paper commemorates the multiple contributions of Dirk Bootsma to human genetics. During a scientific ‘Bootsma’ cruise on his sailing-boat ‘de Losbol’, we visit a variety of scenery locations along the lakes and canals in Friesland, passing the highlights of Dirk Bootsma’s scientific oeuvre. Departing from ‘de Fluessen’, his homeport, with his PhD work on the effect of X-rays and UV on cell cycle progression, we head for the pioneering endeavours of his team on mapping genes on human chromosomes by cell hybridization. Next we explore the use of cell hybrids by the Bootsma team culminating in the molecular cloning of one of the first chromosomal breakpoints involved in oncogenesis: the bcr-abl fusion gene responsible for chronic myelocytic leukemia. This seminal achievement enabled later development of new methods for early detection and very promising therapeutic intervention. A series of highlights at the horizon constitute the contributions of his team to the field of DNA repair, beginning with the discovery of genetic heterogeneity in the repair syndrome xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) followed later by the cloning of a large number of human repair genes. This led to the discovery that DNA repair is strongly conserved in evolution rendering knowledge from yeast relevant for mammals and vice versa. In addition, it resolved the molecular basis of several repair syndromes and permitted functional analysis of the encoded proteins. Another milestone is the discovery of the surprising connection between DNA repair and transcription initiation via the dual functional TFIIH complex in collaboration with Jean-Marc Egly et al. in Strasbourg. This provided an explanation for many puzzling clinical features and triggered a novel concept in human genetics: the existence of repair/transcription syndromes. The generation of many mouse mutants carrying defects in repair pathways yielded valuable models for assessing the clinical relevance of DNA repair including carcinogenesis and the identification of a link between DNA damage and premature aging. His team also opened a fascinating area of cell biology with the analysis of repair and transcription in living cells. A final surprising evolutionary twist was the discovery that photolyases designed for the light-dependent repair of UV-induced DNA lesions appeared to be adopted for driving the mammalian biological clock. The latter indicates that it is time to return to ‘de Fluessen’, where we will consider briefly the merits of Dirk Bootsma for Dutch science in general.

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