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国际自然保护联盟发布《30x30目标实施指南》 快报文章
资源环境快报,2023年第17期
作者:  牛艺博
Microsoft Word(18Kb)  |  收藏  |  浏览/下载:8/0  |  提交时间:2023/09/16
IUCN  Global Biodiversity Framework  30x30  Guide  
UNEP发布《生态系统恢复手册:治愈地球的实用指南》 快报文章
资源环境快报,2021年第9期
作者:  牛艺博
Microsoft Word(15Kb)  |  收藏  |  浏览/下载:467/1  |  提交时间:2021/05/18
Ecosystem  Restoration  Practical Guide  
UNEP和 WRI发布一次性塑料制品监管立法指南 快报文章
资源环境快报,2021年第8期
作者:  廖 琴
Microsoft Word(55Kb)  |  收藏  |  浏览/下载:448/0  |  提交时间:2021/04/30
Single-Use Plastic Products  Plastic Pollution  Legislative Guide  
Structural basis of DNA targeting by a transposon-encoded CRISPR-Cas system 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 577 (7789) : 271-+
作者:  Halpin-Healy, Tyler S.;  Klompe, Sanne E.;  Sternberg, Samuel H.;  Fernandez, Israel S.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:5/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Bacteria use adaptive immune systems encoded by CRISPR and Cas genes to maintain genomic integrity when challenged by pathogens and mobile genetic elements(1-3). Type I CRISPR-Cas systems typically target foreign DNA for degradation via joint action of the ribonucleoprotein complex Cascade and the helicase-nuclease Cas3(4,5), but nuclease-deficient type I systems lacking Cas3 have been repurposed for RNA-guided transposition by bacterial Tn7-like transposons(6,7). How CRISPR- and transposon-associated machineries collaborate during DNA targeting and insertion remains unknown. Here we describe structures of a TniQ-Cascade complex encoded by the Vibrio cholerae Tn6677 transposon using cryo-electron microscopy, revealing the mechanistic basis of this functional coupling. The cryo-electron microscopy maps enabled de novo modelling and refinement of the transposition protein TniQ, which binds to the Cascade complex as a dimer in a head-to-tail configuration, at the interface formed by Cas6 and Cas7 near the 3'  end of the CRISPR RNA (crRNA). The natural Cas8-Cas5 fusion protein binds the 5'  crRNA handle and contacts the TniQ dimer via a flexible insertion domain. A target DNA-bound structure reveals critical interactions necessary for protospacer-adjacent motif recognition and R-loop formation. This work lays the foundation for a structural understanding of how DNA targeting by TniQ-Cascade leads to downstream recruitment of additional transposase proteins, and will guide protein engineering efforts to leverage this system for programmable DNA insertions in genome-engineering applications.


  
Oncometabolites suppress DNA repair by disrupting local chromatin signalling 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Zhang, Xu;  Lei, Bo;  Yuan, Yuan;  Zhang, Li;  Hu, Lu;  Jin, Sen;  Kang, Bilin;  Liao, Xuebin;  Sun, Wenzhi;  Xu, Fuqiang;  Zhong, Yi;  Hu, Ji;  Qi, Hai
收藏  |  浏览/下载:23/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Metabolites that are elevated in tumours inhibit the lysine demethylase KDM4B, resulting in aberrant hypermethylation of histone 3 lysine 9 and decreased homology-dependent DNA repair.


Deregulation of metabolism and disruption of genome integrity are hallmarks of cancer(1). Increased levels of the metabolites 2-hydroxyglutarate, succinate and fumarate occur in human malignancies owing to somatic mutations in the isocitrate dehydrogenase-1 or -2 (IDH1 or IDH2) genes, or germline mutations in the fumarate hydratase (FH) and succinate dehydrogenase genes (SDHA, SDHB, SDHC and SDHD), respectively(2-4). Recent work has made an unexpected connection between these metabolites and DNA repair by showing that they suppress the pathway of homology-dependent repair (HDR)(5,6) and confer an exquisite sensitivity to inhibitors of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) that are being tested in clinical trials. However, the mechanism by which these oncometabolites inhibit HDR remains poorly understood. Here we determine the pathway by which these metabolites disrupt DNA repair. We show that oncometabolite-induced inhibition of the lysine demethylase KDM4B results in aberrant hypermethylation of histone 3 lysine 9 (H3K9) at loci surrounding DNA breaks, masking a local H3K9 trimethylation signal that is essential for the proper execution of HDR. Consequently, recruitment of TIP60 and ATM, two key proximal HDR factors, is substantially impaired at DNA breaks, with reduced end resection and diminished recruitment of downstream repair factors. These findings provide a mechanistic basis for oncometabolite-induced HDR suppression and may guide effective strategies to exploit these defects for therapeutic gain.


  
A distal enhancer at risk locus 11q13.5 promotes suppression of colitis by T-reg cells 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Ma, Xiyu;  Claus, Lucas A. N.;  Leslie, Michelle E.;  Tao, Kai;  Wu, Zhiping;  Liu, Jun;  Yu, Xiao;  Li, Bo;  Zhou, Jinggeng;  Savatin, Daniel V.;  Peng, Junmin;  Tyler, Brett M.;  Heese, Antje;  Russinova, Eugenia;  He, Ping;  Shan, Libo
收藏  |  浏览/下载:38/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Genetic variations underlying susceptibility to complex autoimmune and allergic diseases are concentrated within noncoding regulatory elements termed enhancers(1). The functions of a large majority of disease-associated enhancers are unknown, in part owing to their distance from the genes they regulate, a lack of understanding of the cell types in which they operate, and our inability to recapitulate the biology of immune diseases in vitro. Here, using shared synteny to guide loss-of-function analysis of homologues of human enhancers in mice, we show that the prominent autoimmune and allergic disease risk locus at chromosome 11q13.5(2-7) contains a distal enhancer that is functional in CD4(+) regulatory T (T-reg) cells and required for T-reg-mediated suppression of colitis. The enhancer recruits the transcription factors STAT5 and NF-kappa B to mediate signal-driven expression of Lrrc32, which encodes the protein glycoprotein A repetitions predominant (GARP). Whereas disruption of the Lrrc32 gene results in early lethality, mice lacking the enhancer are viable but lack GARP expression in Foxp3(+) T-reg cells, which are unable to control colitis in a cell-transfer model of the disease. In human T-reg cells, the enhancer forms conformational interactions with the promoter of LRRC32 and enhancer risk variants are associated with reduced histone acetylation and GARP expression. Finally, functional fine-mapping of 11q13.5 using CRISPR-activation (CRISPRa) identifies a CRISPRa-responsive element in the vicinity of risk variant rs11236797 capable of driving GARP expression. These findings provide a mechanistic basis for association of the 11q13.5 risk locus with immune-mediated diseases and identify GARP as a potential target in their therapy.


Shared synteny guides loss-of-function analysis of human enhancer homologues in mice, identifying a distal enhancer at the autoimmune and allergic disease risk locus at chromosome 11q13.5 whose function in regulatory T cells provides a mechanistic basis for its role in disease.


  
Premature mortality related to United States cross-state air pollution 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 578 (7794) : 261-+
作者:  Helmink, Beth A.;  Reddy, Sangeetha M.;  Gao, Jianjun;  Zhang, Shaojun;  Basar, Rafet;  Thakur, Rohit;  Yizhak, Keren;  Sade-Feldman, Moshe;  Blando, Jorge;  Han, Guangchun;  Gopalakrishnan, Vancheswaran;  Xi, Yuanxin;  Zhao, Hao;  Amaria, Rodabe N.;  Tawbi, Hussein A.;  Cogdill, Alex P.;  Liu, Wenbin;  LeBleu, Valerie S.;  Kugeratski, Fernanda G.;  Patel, Sapna;  Davies, Michael A.;  Hwu, Patrick;  Lee, Jeffrey E.;  Gershenwald, Jeffrey E.;  Lucci, Anthony;  Arora, Reetakshi;  Woodman, Scott;  Keung, Emily Z.;  Gaudreau, Pierre-Olivier;  Reuben, Alexandre;  Spencer, Christine N.;  Burton, Elizabeth M.;  Haydu, Lauren E.;  Lazar, Alexander J.;  Zapassodi, Roberta;  Hudgens, Courtney W.;  Ledesma, Deborah A.;  Ong, SuFey;  Bailey, Michael;  Warren, Sarah;  Rao, Disha;  Krijgsman, Oscar;  Rozeman, Elisa A.;  Peeper, Daniel;  Blank, Christian U.;  Schumacher, Ton N.;  Butterfield, Lisa H.;  Zelazowska, Monika A.;  McBride, Kevin M.;  Kalluri, Raghu;  Allison, James;  Petitprez, Florent;  Fridman, Wolf Herman;  Sautes-Fridman, Catherine;  Hacohen, Nir;  Rezvani, Katayoun;  Sharma, Padmanee;  Tetzlaff, Michael T.;  Wang, Linghua;  Wargo, Jennifer A.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:37/0  |  提交时间:2020/05/13

Outdoor air pollution adversely affects human health and is estimated to be responsible for five to ten per cent of the total annual premature mortality in the contiguous United States(1-3). Combustion emissions from a variety of sources, such as power generation or road traffic, make a large contribution to harmful air pollutants such as ozone and fine particulate matter (PM2.5)(4). Efforts to mitigate air pollution have focused mainly on the relationship between local emission sources and local air quality(2). Air quality can also be affected by distant emission sources, however, including emissions from neighbouring federal states(5,6). This cross-state exchange of pollution poses additional regulatory challenges. Here we quantify the exchange of air pollution among the contiguous United States, and assess its impact on premature mortality that is linked to increased human exposure to PM2.5 and ozone from seven emission sectors for 2005 to 2018. On average, we find that 41 to 53 per cent of air-quality-related premature mortality resulting from a state'  s emissions occurs outside that state. We also find variations in the cross-state contributions of different emission sectors and chemical species to premature mortality, and changes in these variations over time. Emissions from electric power generation have the greatest cross-state impacts as a fraction of their total impacts, whereas commercial/residential emissions have the smallest. However, reductions in emissions from electric power generation since 2005 have meant that, by 2018, cross-state premature mortality associated with the commercial/residential sector was twice that associated with power generation. In terms of the chemical species emitted, nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide emissions caused the most cross-state premature deaths in 2005, but by 2018 primary PM2.5 emissions led to cross-state premature deaths equal to three times those associated with sulfur dioxide emissions. These reported shifts in emission sectors and emission species that contribute to premature mortality may help to guide improvements to air quality in the contiguous United States.


  
Structural basis of ligand recognition and self-activation of orphan GPR52 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Liu, Guoxia;  Papa, Arianne;  Katchman, Alexander N.;  Zakharov, Sergey I.;  Roybal, Daniel;  Hennessey, Jessica A.;  Kushner, Jared;  Yang, Lin;  Chen, Bi-Xing;  Kushnir, Alexander;  Dangas, Katerina;  Gygi, Steven P.;  Pitt, Geoffrey S.;  Colecraft, Henry M.;  Ben-Johny, Manu;  Kalocsay, Marian;  Marx, Steven O.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:10/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Structures of the orphan G-protein-coupled receptor GPR52 in ligand-free, G-protein-coupled and ligand-bound states reveal that extracellular loop 2 occupies the orthosteric binding pocket and functions as a built-in agonist to activate the receptor.


GPR52 is a class-A orphan G-protein-coupled receptor that is highly expressed in the brain and represents a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of Huntington'  s disease and several psychiatric disorders(1,2). Pathological malfunction of GPR52 signalling occurs primarily through the heterotrimeric G(s) protein(2), but it is unclear how GPR52 and G(s) couple for signal transduction and whether a native ligand or other activating input is required. Here we present the high-resolution structures of human GPR52 in three states: a ligand-free state, a G(s)-coupled self-activation state and a potential allosteric ligand-bound state. Together, our structures reveal that extracellular loop 2 occupies the orthosteric binding pocket and operates as a built-in agonist, conferring an intrinsically high level of basal activity to GPR52(3). A fully active state is achieved when G(s) is coupled to GPR52 in the absence of an external agonist. The receptor also features a side pocket for ligand binding. These insights into the structure and function of GPR52 could improve our understanding of other self-activated GPCRs, enable the identification of endogenous and tool ligands, and guide drug discovery efforts that target GPR52.


  
Quantum crystal structure in the 250-kelvin superconducting lanthanum hydride 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 578 (7793) : 66-+
作者:  Gate, David;  Saligrama, Naresha;  Leventhal, Olivia;  Yang, Andrew C.;  Unger, Michael S.;  Middeldorp, Jinte;  Chen, Kelly;  Lehallier, Benoit;  Channappa, Divya;  De Los Santos, Mark B.;  McBride, Alisha;  Pluvinage, John;  Elahi, Fanny;  Tam, Grace Kyin-Ye;  Kim, Yongha;  Greicius, Michael;  Wagner, Anthony D.;  Aigner, Ludwig;  Galasko, Douglas R.;  Davis, Mark M.;  Wyss-Coray, Tony
收藏  |  浏览/下载:19/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

The discovery of superconductivity at 200 kelvin in the hydrogen sulfide system at high pressures(1) demonstrated the potential of hydrogen-rich materials as high-temperature superconductors. Recent theoretical predictions of rare-earth hydrides with hydrogen cages(2,3) and the subsequent synthesis of LaH10 with a superconducting critical temperature (T-c) of 250 kelvin(4,5) have placed these materials on the verge of achieving the long-standing goal of room-temperature superconductivity. Electrical and X-ray diffraction measurements have revealed a weakly pressure-dependent T-c for LaH10 between 137 and 218 gigapascals in a structure that has a face-centred cubic arrangement of lanthanum atoms(5). Here we show that quantum atomic fluctuations stabilize a highly symmetrical Fm (3) over barm crystal structure over this pressure range. The structure is consistent with experimental findings and has a very large electron-phonon coupling constant of 3.5. Although ab initio classical calculations predict that this Fm (3) over barm structure undergoes distortion at pressures below 230 gigapascals(2,3,) yielding a complex energy landscape, the inclusion of quantum effects suggests that it is the true ground-state structure. The agreement between the calculated and experimental Tc values further indicates that this phase is responsible for the superconductivity observed at 250 kelvin. The relevance of quantum fluctuations calls into question many of the crystal structure predictions that have been made for hydrides within a classical approach and that currently guide the experimental quest for room-temperature superconductivity(6-8). Furthermore, we find that quantum effects are crucial for the stabilization of solids with high electron-phonon coupling constants that could otherwise be destabilized by the large electron-phonon interaction(9), thus reducing the pressures required for their synthesis.


  
Zucchini consensus motifs determine the mechanism of pre-piRNA production 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 578 (7794) : 311-+
作者:  Clark, Timothy D.;  Raby, Graham D.;  Roche, Dominique G.;  Binning, Sandra A.;  Speers-Roesch, Ben;  Jutfelt, Fredrik;  Sundin, Josefin
收藏  |  浏览/下载:14/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

PIWI-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) of between approximately 24 and 31 nucleotides in length guide PIWI proteins to silence transposons in animal gonads, thereby ensuring fertility(1). In the biogenesis of piRNAs, PIWI proteins are first loaded with 5 '  -monophosphorylated RNA fragments called pre-pre-piRNAs, which then undergo endonucleolytic cleavage to produce pre-piRNAs(1,2). Subsequently, the 3 '  -ends of pre-piRNAs are trimmed by the exonuclease Trimmer (PNLDC1 in mouse)(3-6) and 2 '  -O-methylated by the methyltransferase Hen1 (HENMT1 in mouse)(7-9), generating mature piRNAs. It is assumed that the endonuclease Zucchini (MitoPLD in mouse) is a major enzyme catalysing the cleavage of pre-pre-piRNAs into pre-piRNAs(10-13). However, direct evidence for this model is lacking, and how pre-piRNAs are generated remains unclear. Here, to analyse pre-piRNA production, we established a Trimmer-knockout silkworm cell line and derived a cell-free system that faithfully recapitulates Zucchini-mediated cleavage of PIWI-loaded pre-pre-piRNAs. We found that pre-piRNAs are generated by parallel Zucchini-dependent and -independent mechanisms. Cleavage by Zucchini occurs at previously unrecognized consensus motifs on pre-pre-piRNAs, requires the RNA helicase Armitage, and is accompanied by 2 '  -O-methylation of pre-piRNAs. By contrast, slicing of pre-pre-piRNAs with weak Zucchini motifs is achieved by downstream complementary piRNAs, producing pre-piRNAs without 2 '  -O-methylation. Regardless of the endonucleolytic mechanism, pre-piRNAs are matured by Trimmer and Hen1. Our findings highlight multiplexed processing of piRNA precursors that supports robust and flexible piRNA biogenesis.


A silkworm model recapitulates key steps of Zucchini-mediated cleavage of pre-pre-piRNA and provides insights into Zucchini-mediated and -independent pathways that generate pre-piRNAs, which converge to a common piRNA maturation step.