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Query: EC:2.7.11.1 (
protein kinase
)
81,284
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recently, findings regarding a group of cancer predisposition and chromosome instability syndromes, Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS), the
ataxia-telangiectasia
-like disorder (A-TLD) and ataxia telangiectasia have shed light on the unexpected role of recombinational DNA repair proteins in DNA-damage-dependent cell-cycle regulation. Mutations in the Mre11 complex cause A-TLD and NBS. In addition, functions of the Mre11 complex have been biochemically linked to ATM, the large
protein kinase
that is defective in
ataxia-telangiectasia
cells by the observation that Nbs1 is a bona fide substrate of the ATM kinase.
...
PMID:The Mre11 complex and ATM: collaborating to navigate S phase. 1080 60
The breast/ovarian cancer susceptibility gene BRCA1 exerts its tumor suppressor function, at least in part, by participating in DNA repair and/or DNA damage-responsive pathways. BRCA1 protein is hyperphosphorylated following various DNA-damaging events. Here, we report that the
ataxia telangiectasia mutated protein
-related
protein kinase
(ATR) is involved in the phosphorylation of BRCA1 following gamma radiation and hydroxyurea treatment. We have shown that ATR can phosphorylate several BRCA1 fragments in vitro and that a kinase-inactive mutant of ATR interacts with BRCA1 in vivo. Taken together, these results suggest that ATR directly phosphorylates BRCA1 following DNA damage.
...
PMID:Ataxia telangiectasia-related protein is involved in the phosphorylation of BRCA1 following deoxyribonucleic acid damage. 1101 25
In response to DNA damage, eukaryotic cells use a system of checkpoint controls to delay cell-cycle progression. Checkpoint delays provide time for repair of damaged DNA before its replication in S phase and before segregation of chromatids in M phase. The Cds1 (Chk2) tumour-suppressor protein has been implicated in certain checkpoint responses in mammalian cells. It directly phosphorylates and inactivates the mitosis-inducing phosphatase Cdc25 in vitro and is required to maintain the G2 arrest that is observed in response to gamma-irradiation. Cds1 also directly phosphorylates p53 in vitro at a site that is implicated in its stabilization, and is required for stabilization of p53 and induction of p53-dependent transcripts in vivo upon gamma-ionizing radiation. Thus, Cds1 functions in both the G1 and G2 checkpoint responses. Like Cds1, the checkpoint
protein kinase
ATM (
ataxia-telangiectasia
-mutated) is required for correct operation of both the G1 and G2 damage checkpoints. ATM is necessary for phosphorylation and activation of Cds1 in vivo and can phosphorylate Cds1 in vitro, although evidence that the sites that are phosphorylated by ATM are required for activation is lacking. Here we show that threonine 68 of Cds1 is the preferred site of phosphorylation by ATM in vitro, and is the principal irradiation-induced site of phosphorylation in vivo. The importance of this phosphorylation site is demonstrated by the failure of a mutant, non-phosphorylatable form of Cds1 to be fully activated, and by its reduced ability to induce G1 arrest in response to ionising radiation.
...
PMID:Threonine 68 is required for radiation-induced phosphorylation and activation of Cds1. 1102 70
Following challenge with proinflammatory stimuli or generation of DNA double strand breaks (DSBs), transcription factor NF-kappaB translocates from the cytoplasm to the nucleus to activate expression of target genes. In addition, NF-kappaB plays a key role in protecting cells from proapoptotic stimuli, including DSBs. Patients suffering from the genetic disorder
ataxia-telangiectasia
, caused by mutations in the ATM gene, are highly sensitive to inducers of DSBs, such as ionizing radiation. Similar hypersensitivity is displayed by cell lines derived from
ataxia-telangiectasia
patients or Atm knockout mice. The ATM protein, a member of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-like family, is a multifunctional
protein kinase
whose activity is stimulated by DSBs. As both ATM and NF-kappaB deficiencies result in increased sensitivity to DSBs, we examined the role of ATM in NF-kappaB activation. We report that ATM is essential for NF-kappaB activation in response to DSBs but not proinflammatory stimuli, and this activity is mediated via the IkappaB kinase complex. DNA-dependent protein kinase, another member of the PI3K-like family, PI3K itself, and c-Abl, a nuclear tyrosine kinase, are not required for this response.
...
PMID:ATM is required for IkappaB kinase (IKKk) activation in response to DNA double strand breaks. 1111 7
ATM mutations are responsible for the genetic disease
ataxia-telangiectasia
(
A-T
). ATM encodes a
protein kinase
that is activated by ionizing radiation-induced double strand DNA breaks. Cells derived from
A-T
patients show many abnormalities, including accelerated telomere loss and hypersensitivity to ionizing radiation; they enter into mitosis and apoptosis after DNA damage. Pin2 was originally identified as a protein involved in G(2)/M regulation and is almost identical to TRF1, a telomeric protein that negatively regulates telomere elongation. Pin2 and TRF1, probably encoded by the same gene, PIN2/TRF1, are regulated during the cell cycle. Furthermore, up-regulation of Pin2 or TRF1 induces mitotic entry and apoptosis, a phenotype similar to that of
A-T
cells after DNA damage. These results suggest that ATM may regulate the function of Pin2/TRF1, but their exact relationship remains unknown. Here we show that Pin2/TRF1 coimmunoprecipitated with ATM, and its phosphorylation was increased in an ATM-dependent manner by ionizing DNA damage. Furthermore, activated ATM directly phosphorylated Pin2/TRF1 preferentially on the conserved Ser(219)-Gln site in vitro and in vivo. The biological significance of this phosphorylation is substantiated by functional analyses of the phosphorylation site mutants. Although expression of Pin2 and its mutants has no detectable effect on telomere length in transient transfection, a Pin2 mutant refractory to ATM phosphorylation on Ser(219) potently induces mitotic entry and apoptosis and increases radiation hypersensitivity of
A-T
cells. In contrast, Pin2 mutants mimicking ATM phosphorylation on Ser(219) completely fail to induce apoptosis and also reduce radiation hypersensitivity of
A-T
cells. Interestingly, the phenotype of the phosphorylation-mimicking mutants is the same as that which resulted from inhibition of endogenous Pin2/TRF1 in
A-T
cells by its dominant-negative mutants. These results demonstrate for the first time that ATM interacts with and phosphorylates Pin2/TRF1 and suggest that Pin2/TRF1 may be involved in the cellular response to double strand DNA breaks.
...
PMID:Telomeric protein Pin2/TRF1 as an important ATM target in response to double strand DNA breaks. 1137 76
ATM, the gene mutated in the human immunodeficiency disorder
ataxia-telangiectasia
(
A-T
), plays a central role in recognizing ionizing radiation damage in DNA and in controlling several cell cycle checkpoints. We describe here a murine model in which a nine-nucleotide in-frame deletion has been introduced into the Atm gene by homologous recombination followed by removal of the selectable marker cassette by Cre-loxP site-specific, recombination-mediated excision. This mouse, Atm-DeltaSRI, was designed as a model of one of the most common deletion mutations (7636del9) found in
A-T
patients. The murine Atm deletion results in the loss of three amino acid residues (SRI; 2556-2558) but produces near full-length detectable Atm protein that lacks
protein kinase
activity. Radiosensitivity was observed in Atm-DeltaSRI mice, whereas the immunological profile of these mice showed greater heterogeneity of T-cell subsets than observed in Atm(-/-) mice. The life span of Atm-DeltaSRI mice was significantly longer than that of Atm(-/-) mice when maintained under nonspecific pathogen-free conditions. This can be accounted for by a lower incidence of thymic lymphomas in Atm-DeltaSRI mice up to 40 weeks, after which time the animals died of other causes. The thymic lymphomas in Atm-DeltaSRI mice were characterized by extensive apoptosis, which appears to be attributable to an increased number of cells expressing Fas ligand. A variety of other tumors including B-cell lymphomas, sarcomas, and carcinomas not seen in Atm(-/-) mice were observed in older Atm-DeltaSRI animals. Thus, expression of mutant protein in Atm-DeltaSRI knock-in mice gives rise to a discernibly different phenotype to Atm(-/-) mice, which may account for the heterogeneity seen in
A-T
patients with different mutations.
...
PMID:Atm knock-in mice harboring an in-frame deletion corresponding to the human ATM 7636del9 common mutation exhibit a variant phenotype. 1138 91
DNA damage checkpoints are complex signal transduction pathways that are critical for normal cellular recovery following potentially lethal genotoxic insults. The
ataxia-telangiectasia mutated
(
ATM
)
protein kinase
is a critical component in these pathways and integrates the cellular response to damage by phosphorylating key proteins involved in cell cycle regulation and DNA repair. Lack of normal
ATM
function in the inherited
ataxia-telangiectasia
(
A-T
) syndrome results in a pleiotropic clinical syndrome characterized by a marked increased risk of cancer and profound hypersensitivity to ionizing radiation. Cells derived from patients with
A-T
share some of these attributes with genomic instability, loss of normal cell cycle arrest pathways, defects in DNA repair and increased radiation sensitivity. The radiosensitivity of
A-T
cells suggests that pharmacological inhibitors of the
ATM
kinase should be effective radiosensitizing agents. In fact, caffeine inhibits
ATM
kinase activity at concentrations that result in an
A-T
-like phenotype with loss of cell cycle checkpoints and hypersensitivity to ionizing radiation. Although the clinical use of caffeine as a radiosensitizer is limited by potentially lethal systemic toxicities, more potent methyl xanthines may selectively inhibit the
ATM
pathway at clinically achievable levels. Interestingly, caffeine and other methyl xanthines preferentially radiosensitize cells that lack normal p53 function. Because p53 is commonly inactivated in epithelial malignancies, this suggests that small molecule inhibitors of
ATM
might selectively sensitize the majority of tumors to the lethal effects of ionizing radiation while sparing normal tissues.
...
PMID:ATM as a target for novel radiosensitizers. 1167 56
NF-kappa B is a critical nuclear transcriptional factor that is activated in response to cellular stresses and regulates the expression of genes involved in cell proliferation and cell death. When regulated NF-kappa B activation is disrupted, cells undergo apoptosis. That is, constitutively elevated or dysregulated NF-kappa B activation leads to cell death in response to stress. These mechanisms have been shown experimentally by expressing dominant negative inhibitors of NF-kappa B (I kappa B-alpha) in cancer cells exposed to chemotherapeutic agents or to ionizing radiation. NF-kappa B also plays an important role in a novel, radiation-inducible signaling pathway that involves the
ataxia-telangiectasia mutated
(
ATM
)
protein kinase
. Cells from patients with
ataxia-telangiectasia
(AT) are exquisitely sensitive to ionizing radiation and exhibit impaired NF-kappa B activation in response to this stress. Restoration of NF-kappa B regulation in AT fibroblasts by introducing a dominant negative form of I kappa B-alpha has resulted in correction of radiation sensitivity and a reduction of ionizing radiation-induced apoptosis. Expression of introduced
ATM
in AT cells results in correction of NF-kappa B regulation and an increase in postradiation survival without reduction in radiation-induced apoptosis. Taken together, these observations support a central role for NF-kappa B regulation in cellular intrinsic radiation sensitivity and apoptosis after exposure to ionizing radiation. Therefore, we hypothesize that the signaling pathway involving
ATM
/NF-kappa B/I kappa B offers attractive potential molecular targets for radiation sensitization in strategies to enhance the therapeutic ratio in cancer treatment.
...
PMID:NF-kappa B signaling pathway as a target for human tumor radiosensitization. 1167 59
ATR [
ataxia-telangiectasia
-mutated (ATM)- and Rad3-related] is a
protein kinase
required for both DNA damage-induced cell cycle checkpoint responses and the DNA replication checkpoint that prevents mitosis before the completion of DNA synthesis. Although ATM and ATR kinases share many substrates, the different phenotypes of ATM- and ATR-deficient mice indicate that these kinases are not functionally redundant. Here we demonstrate that ATR but not ATM phosphorylates the human Rad17 (hRad17) checkpoint protein on Ser(635) and Ser(645) in vitro. In undamaged synchronized human cells, these two sites were phosphorylated in late G(1), S, and G(2)/M, but not in early-mid G(1). Treatment of cells with genotoxic stress induced phosphorylation of hRad17 in cells in early-mid G(1). Expression of kinase-inactive ATR resulted in reduced phosphorylation of these residues, but these same serine residues were phosphorylated in ionizing radiation (IR)-treated ATM-deficient human cell lines. IR-induced phosphorylation of hRad17 was also observed in ATM-deficient tissues, but induction of Ser(645) was not optimal. Expression of a hRad17 mutant, with both serine residues changed to alanine, abolished IR-induced activation of the G(1)/S checkpoint in MCF-7 cells. These results suggest ATR and hRad17 are essential components of a DNA damage response pathway in mammalian cells.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of serines 635 and 645 of human Rad17 is cell cycle regulated and is required for G(1)/S checkpoint activation in response to DNA damage. 1168 27
Mutations in the ATM gene lead to the genetic disorder
ataxia-telangiectasia
. ATM encodes a
protein kinase
that is mainly distributed in the nucleus of proliferating cells. Recent studies reveal that ATM regulates multiple cell cycle checkpoints by phosphorylating different targets at different stages of the cell cycle. ATM also functions in the regulation of DNA repair and apoptosis, suggesting that it is a central regulator of responses to DNA double-strand breaks.
...
PMID:ATM, a central controller of cellular responses to DNA damage. 1168 84
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