Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.3.1.21 (
CPT
)
4,580
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
DNA mismatch repair (MMR) corrects DNA polymerase insertion errors that have escaped proofreading in order to avoid the accumulation of deleterious mutations. While the role of MMR in the correction of replication errors is well established, its involvement in the processing of DNA damage induced by chemical and physical agents is less clear. A role for some of the MMR proteins, such as MSH2, in the repair of double strand break (DSBs) through recombination has also been envisaged. Why MMR- deficient cells are sensitive to agents causing replication fork stalling and thus DSBs remains unclear. To verify a possible role of MSH2 in homologous recombinational repair, we have treated cells from knockout mice for the MSH2 gene and mouse colorectal carcinoma cells also defective for MSH2 with different doses of camptothecin, an agent known to interfere with DNA replication. In the absence of MSH2, we found a reduced survival rate accompanied by higher levels of chromosomal damage and SCE induction. Furthermore, MSH2(-/-) cells displayed an elevated spontaneous
RAD51
focus-forming activity and a higher induction of
RAD51
foci following camptothecin treatment. Thus, the absence of MSH2 could result in both spontaneous DNA damage and uncontrolled recombination events leading to the observed higher yield of chromosomal damage and the higher induction of
RAD51
foci following
CPT
treatment. Therefore, our results suggest an involvement of MSH2 in the early events leading to correct
RAD51
relocalization after the formation of DSBs specifically produced at the blocked replication fork.
...
PMID:Hypersensitivity to camptothecin in MSH2 deficient cells is correlated with a role for MSH2 protein in recombinational repair. 1169 39
Fanconi anemia (FA) patients exhibit bone marrow failure, developmental defects and cancer. The FA pathway maintains chromosomal stability in concert with replication fork maintenance and DNA double strand break (DSB) repair pathways including
RAD51
-mediated homologous recombination (HR).
RAD51
is a recombinase that maintains replication forks and repairs DSBs, but also rearranges chromosomes. Two RecQ helicases, RECQL5 and Bloom syndrome mutated (BLM) suppress HR through nonredundant mechanisms. Here we test the impact deletion of RECQL5 and BLM has on mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells deleted for FANCB, a member of the FA core complex. We show that RECQL5, but not BLM, conferred resistance to mitomycin C (MMC, an interstrand crosslinker) and camptothecin (
CPT
, a type 1 topoisomerase inhibitor) in FANCB-defective cells. RECQL5 suppressed, while BLM caused, breaks and radials in FANCB-deleted cells exposed to
CPT
or MMC, respectively. RECQL5 protected the nascent replication strand from MRE11-mediated degradation and restarted stressed replication forks in a manner additive to FANCB. By contrast BLM restarted, but did not protect, replication forks in a manner epistatic to FANCB. RECQL5 also lowered
RAD51
levels in FANCB-deleted cells at stressed replication sites implicating a rearrangement avoidance mechanism. Thus, RECQL5 and BLM impact FANCB-defective cells differently in response to replication stress with relevance to chemotherapeutic regimes.
...
PMID:RECQL5 and BLM exhibit divergent functions in cells defective for the Fanconi anemia pathway. 2552 Jan 94
REV1 is one of the major Y-family DNA polymerases. It not only functions as a scaffold protein to mediate other specialized DNA polymerases to sites of lesions, but also inserts deoxycytidine across the lesion strand during translesion DNA synthesis (TLS). Meanwhile, REV1 has been reported to be involved in homologous recombination (HR) repair. Here we further explore the roles of REV1-interacting proteins
RAD51
and RAD51C in REV1-mediated DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair. We found that
RAD51
but not RAD51C regulates REV1 recruitment to DSB sites via pulsed laser microirradiation. Interestingly, immunofluorescence staining exhibits that REV1 also regulates
RAD51
focus formation in response to
CPT
treatment. These results suggest that REV1 and
RAD51
might be mutually dependent on each other in the REV1-related HR pathway.
...
PMID:[RAD51 regulates REV1 recruitment to DNA double-strand <br/>break sites]. 3046 33