NEIL3 Protein
Overview
NEIL3 (Nei-Like DNA Glycosylase 3) is a base excision repair (BER) enzyme that plays a critical role in protecting cells from oxidative DNA damage. As a member of the endonuclease VIII-like (NEI) family of DNA glycosylases, NEIL3 functions as a DNA repair protein that recognizes and removes damaged bases from the DNA backbone. The NEIL family comprises three mammalian members (NEIL1, NEIL2, and NEIL3), with NEIL3 being particularly enriched in the brain and possessing specialized functions in managing oxidative lesions that accumulate during normal neuronal metabolism and pathological conditions associated with neurodegeneration.
Function and Biology
NEIL3 functions as a bifunctional glycosylase-AP lyase enzyme within the base excision repair pathway. Its primary role involves scanning DNA for oxidative lesions, particularly 8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG), thymine glycol (Tg), and 4,6-diamino-5-formamidopyrimidine (FapyG), which are hallmark products of oxidative damage. Upon recognition of these lesions, NEIL3 catalyzes hydrolysis of the N-glycosidic bond linking the damaged base to the deoxyribose sugar, creating an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site. The AP lyase activity of NEIL3 further processes this intermediate by cleaving the phosphodiester backbone at the 3' side of the AP site, generating a 3'-phosphate terminus.
...
NEIL3 Protein
Overview
NEIL3 (Nei-Like DNA Glycosylase 3) is a base excision repair (BER) enzyme that plays a critical role in protecting cells from oxidative DNA damage. As a member of the endonuclease VIII-like (NEI) family of DNA glycosylases, NEIL3 functions as a DNA repair protein that recognizes and removes damaged bases from the DNA backbone. The NEIL family comprises three mammalian members (NEIL1, NEIL2, and NEIL3), with NEIL3 being particularly enriched in the brain and possessing specialized functions in managing oxidative lesions that accumulate during normal neuronal metabolism and pathological conditions associated with neurodegeneration.
Function and Biology
NEIL3 functions as a bifunctional glycosylase-AP lyase enzyme within the base excision repair pathway. Its primary role involves scanning DNA for oxidative lesions, particularly 8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG), thymine glycol (Tg), and 4,6-diamino-5-formamidopyrimidine (FapyG), which are hallmark products of oxidative damage. Upon recognition of these lesions, NEIL3 catalyzes hydrolysis of the N-glycosidic bond linking the damaged base to the deoxyribose sugar, creating an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site. The AP lyase activity of NEIL3 further processes this intermediate by cleaving the phosphodiester backbone at the 3' side of the AP site, generating a 3'-phosphate terminus.
NEIL3 is predominantly localized to mitochondria, though evidence suggests some nuclear localization exists. This mitochondrial preference is particularly significant given the high oxidative stress environment within mitochondrial compartments, where electron transport chain activity generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) as byproducts. The protein contains a mitochondrial localization signal sequence that directs subcellular targeting. Unlike some other BER enzymes that function across both nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, NEIL3's preferential mitochondrial localization suggests specialized roles in protecting mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) integrity.
Role in Neurodegeneration
The involvement of NEIL3 in neurodegeneration emerges from multiple convergent lines of evidence. Neurons are particularly vulnerable to oxidative stress due to their high metabolic demands, limited regenerative capacity, and relative lack of antioxidant defenses compared to other cell types. Accumulated oxidative DNA damage, including lesions that require NEIL3-mediated repair, is a hallmark feature of multiple neurodegenerative conditions including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
Impaired NEIL3 function or reduced expression has been associated with increased susceptibility to neurodegeneration. Studies examining NEIL3-deficient models demonstrate increased vulnerability to oxidative stress and accelerated neuronal loss under conditions that recapitulate aspects of neurodegenerative diseases. In Alzheimer's disease, abnormal accumulation of oxidative lesions in mtDNA correlates with disease severity, suggesting that inadequate NEIL3-mediated repair contributes to neuronal dysfunction. Similarly, in Parkinson's disease, mitochondrial dysfunction and impaired mtDNA maintenance are central to dopaminergic neuron degeneration, making NEIL3's role in mtDNA repair particularly relevant.
Molecular Mechanisms
NEIL3 participates in the complete base excision repair cycle. Following NEIL3's glycosylase-AP lyase activity, downstream BER enzymes including DNA polymerase beta (POLB) and DNA ligase I (LIG1) complete the repair process through gap-filling synthesis and strand ligation. The efficiency of these sequential enzymatic steps directly impacts genomic stability and cellular survival under oxidative stress.
Post-translational modifications regulate NEIL3 activity. Phosphorylation by kinases such as ATM (ataxia telangiectasia mutated) and DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs) modulates NEIL3 function in response to DNA damage. Additionally, poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation by PARP enzymes can influence NEIL3 localization and activity within damaged DNA regions.
Clinical and Research Significance
NEIL3 represents a therapeutic target for neuroprotection. Enhancing NEIL3 expression or improving its catalytic efficiency could theoretically reduce oxidative DNA damage accumulation in neurons. Conversely, genetic variations in NEIL3 may influence individual susceptibility to age-related neurodegeneration. Research continues examining whether NEIL3 polymorphisms associate with neurodegeneration risk and whether NEIL3 dysfunction precipitates or exacerbates disease pathology.
NEIL1, NEIL2, OGG1, APE1, POLB, LIG1, Base Excision Repair, Oxidative DNA Damage, Mitochondrial DNA, Neuroinflammation, ROS Metabolism, Neuronal Aging