Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0004135 (ATM)
13,001 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have previously demonstrated that cells from patients with ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) fail to show initial delay at several cell cycle checkpoints post-irradiation. In addition a defect in the induction of p53 by ionizing radiation was evident. We demonstrate here that the radiation signal transduction pathway operating through p53, its target gene WAF1, cyclin-dependent kinases and the retinoblastoma (Rb) protein is defective in A-T cells. The defective p53 induction after ionizing radiation, observed previously in A-T cells, was also reflected at the functional level using p53-DNA binding activity, transactivation and transfection with wild type p53. Correction of the defect at the G1/S checkpoint was observed when wild type p53 was constitutively expressed in A-T cells. Exposure of control cells to radiation gave rise to p53 induction and as a consequence increased expression of WAF1 mRNA and protein, but A-T cells were defective in this response. As expected the WAF1 response in irradiated control cells resulted in an inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase activity including cyclin E-cdk2, which plays an important role in the transition from G1 to S phase. No inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase activity was observed in A-T cells correlating with the delayed WAF1 response. On the contrary an enhancement of cyclin-dependent kinase activity was seen in A-T cells post-irradiation. An accumulation of the hypophosphorylated form of Rb protein occurred in irradiated control cells compatible with the G1/S phase delay observed in these cells after exposure to radiation. In unirradiated A-T cells the amount of Rb protein was much higher compared to controls and it was mainly in the hyperphosphorylated (functionally inactive) form. In addition, accumulation of the hypophosphorylated form of Rb in A-T cells post-irradiation was defective, consistent with the lack of cell cycle arrest. Thus the failure of the G1/S checkpoint in A-T cells after exposure to ionizing radiation is consistent with a defective radiation signal transduction pathway operating through p53.
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PMID:Nature of G1/S cell cycle checkpoint defect in ataxia-telangiectasia. 765 23

Replication protein A (RPA), the trimeric single-stranded DNA-binding protein complex of eukaryotic cells, is important to DNA replication and repair. Phosphorylation of the p34 subunit of RPA is modulated by the cell cycle, occurring during S and G2 but not during G1. The function of phosphorylated p34 remains unknown. We show that RPA p34 phosphorylation is significantly induced by ionizing radiation. The phosphorylated form, p36, is similar if not identical to the phosphorylated S/G2 form. gamma-Irradiation-induced phosphorylation occurs without new protein synthesis and in cells in G1. Mutation of cdc2-type protein kinase phosphorylation sites in p34 eliminates the ionizing radiation response. The gamma-irradiation-induced phosphorylation of RPA p34 is delayed in cells from ataxia telangiectasia, a human inherited disease conferring DNA repair defects and early-onset tumorigenesis. UV-induced phosphorylation of RPA p34 occurs less rapidly than gamma-irradiation-induced phosphorylation but is kinetically similar between ataxia telangiectasia and normal cells. This is the first time that modification of a repair protein, RPA, has been linked with a DNA damage response and suggests that phosphorylation may play a role in regulating DNA repair pathways.
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PMID:The ionizing radiation-induced replication protein A phosphorylation response differs between ataxia telangiectasia and normal human cells. 824 44

The recent description of a novel gene (ATM) mutated in ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T), with homologies to genes encoding proteins involved in both G1/S and G2/M checkpoint control, points to a common defect in cell cycle control in A-T operating through the cyclin-dependent kinases. In this report we demonstrate that cyclin-dependent kinases are resistant to inhibition by ionizing radiation exposure in A-T cells, and this appears to be due to insufficient induction of WAF1. Exposure of control lymphoblastoid cells to radiation during S phase and in G2 phase causes a rapid inhibition of cyclin A-Cdk2 and cyclin B-Cdc2 activities, respectively. Irradiation led to a 5-20-fold increase in Cdk-associated WAF1 in these cells, which accounts at least in part for the decrease in cyclin-dependent kinase activity. In contrast, radiation did not inhibit any of the cyclin-dependent kinase activities in S phase or G2 phase in A-T cells at short times after irradiation nor was there any significant change in the level of Cdk-associated WAF1 compared to unirradiated cells. These results are similar to those reported previously for the G1 checkpoint and provide additional evidence for the involvement of ATM at multiple points in cell cycle regulation.
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PMID:Defect in multiple cell cycle checkpoints in ataxia-telangiectasia postirradiation. 870 89

The gene mutated in the human genetic disorder ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) has been described recently (Savitsky et al., 1995a) and the complete coding sequence of this gene, ATM, has been reported (Savitsky et al., 1995b). The derived amino acid sequence demonstrates significant homologies to several proteins containing a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) domain, including the yeast TOR proteins and the human protein FRAP. Since the TOR and FRAP proteins are targets for the immunosuppressive drug rapamycin, we have investigated the effects of this compound on A-T cells. We report here that 3 A-T cell lines are more resistant than control cells to rapamycin's growth inhibiting effects but were more sensitive to the PI3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin. As expected rapamycin (1 nM) inhibited the rate of exit of control cells from G1 phase but failed to perturb the progression of A-T cells. This difference in cell cycle progress after rapamycin treatment is reflected in ribosomal S6 protein kinase (p70S6k) by both a downward mobility shift on SDS-PAGE and inhibition of activity. Furthermore, the G1 phase cyclin-dependent kinase, cyclin E-cdk2, was rapidly inhibited in control cells post-treatment, whereas in A-T cells it took considerably longer to observe inhibition. There was no evidence that a GST-FKBP12 fusion protein specifically precipitated the ATM protein in the presence of rapamycin in either cell type. These results demonstrate that the ATM protein is not a direct target for rapamycin but its functional loss renders cells more resistant to this compound.
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PMID:Rapamycin resistance in ataxia-telangiectasia. 880 86

We investigated the requirements for protein p53 and the ATM gene product in radiation-induced inhibition of DNA synthesis and regulation of the cyclin E/ and cyclin A/cyclin dependent kinases (Cdks). Wild type (WT) mouse lung fibroblasts (MLFs), p53(-/-) knock-out MLFs, normal human skin fibroblasts (HSF-55), and human AT skin fibroblasts (GM02052) were used in the investigations. The absence of p53 had no significant effect on the inhibition or recovery of DNA synthesis throughout the S phase, as determined from BrdU labeling and flow cytometry, or the rapid inhibition of cyclin A/Cdks. Gamma radiation (8 Gy) inhibited DNA synthesis and progression into G2 during the first 3 h after irradiation, and the recovery of these processes occurred at similar rates in both WT and p53(-/-) MLFs. The cyclin A/Cdks were inhibited 55-70% at 1 h after irradiation in both cell types, but p21WAF1/Cip1 levels or p21 interaction with Cdk2 did not increase in the irradiated p53(-/-) MLFs. Although p53(-/-) MLFs do not exhibit prolonged arrest at a G1 checkpoint, radiation did induce a rapid 20% reduction and small super-recovery of cyclin E/Cdk2 within 1-2 h after irradiation. Similar inhibition and recovery of cyclin E/Cdk2 previously had been associated with regulation of transient G1 delay and the inhibition of initiation at an apparent G1/S checkpoint in Chinese hamster cells. In contrast, loss of the ATM gene product abrogated transient cyclin E/Cdk2 inhibition, most inhibition of DNA synthesis and all, but a 10-15% inhibition, of the cyclin A/Cdks. The results indicate that neither p53 nor p21 is required for transient inhibition of cyclin E/Cdk2 associated with the G1/S checkpoint or for inhibition of DNA synthesis at 'checkpoints' within the S phase. Conversely, the ATM gene product appears to be essential for regulation of the G1/S checkpoint and for inhibition of DNA replication associated with the inhibition of cyclin A/Cdk2. Differential aspects of DNA synthesis inhibition among cell types are presented and discussed in the context of S phase checkpoints.
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PMID:Requirements for p53 and the ATM gene product in the regulation of G1/S and S phase checkpoints. 948 36

Abundance and activity of p53 are predominantly regulated posttranslationally. Structural disturbance in transcribed genes induced by radiation, e.g. DNA damage, or by transcriptional inhibitors cause p53 protein stabilization by a yet unknown mechanism. Using stable and transient transfections for the analysis of p53 mutant proteins, we have ruled out a role in stabilization by UV, gamma irradiation or actinomycin C for the following putative phosphorylation sites in the p53 protein: serines 6, 9, 15, 33, 315 and 392, and threonine 18. By double mutation combinations of phosphorylations were also ruled out; 6,9; 15,18; 15,37. These mutations eliminate modifications by casein kinases I and II, DNA-PK, ATM, CDK and JNK. Also the 30 carboxyterminal amino acids are not required for induced p53 stabilization. Thus neither phosphorylations of individual amino acids nor interactions of the carboxyterminus of p53 with cellular macromolecules appear to play a role in the stabilization process. The only single prerequisite for induced stabilization of p53 is its prior destabilization by Mdm2. However, the level of active Mdm2 must be controlled carefully: overexpression of Mdm2 inhibits UV induced p53 stabilization.
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PMID:DNA damage induced p53 stabilization: no indication for an involvement of p53 phosphorylation. 1020 33

The TRAIL death receptor KILLER/DR5 is induced by DNA damaging agents in wild-type p53-expressing cells. Here we show that, unlike the p53-target CDK-inhibitor p21WAF1/CIP1, the TRAIL death receptor KILLER/DR5 is only induced in cells undergoing p53-dependent apoptosis and not cell cycle arrest. Thus GM glioblastoma cells carrying an inducible MMTV-driven p53 gene undergo cell cycle arrest and upregulate p21 but not KILLER/DR5 expression upon dexamethasone exposure. WI38 normal lung fibroblasts undergoing cell cycle arrest in response to ionizing irradiation also induce p21 but not KILLER/DR5 gene expression. KILLER/DR5 upregulation is also deficient in irradiated lymphoblastoid cells derived from patients with Ataxia Teleangiectasia suggesting a role for the ATM-p53 pathway in regulating KILLER/DR5 expression after DNA damage. Inhibition of transcription by Actinomycin D blocks both KILLER/DR5 and p21 induction in cells undergoing p53-dependent apoptosis. Our results suggest that the p53-dependent transcriptional induction of KILLER/DR5 death receptor is restricted to cells undergoing apoptosis and not cells undergoing exclusively p53-dependent G1 arrest.
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PMID:Induction of the TRAIL receptor KILLER/DR5 in p53-dependent apoptosis but not growth arrest. 1059 42

Cell cycle checkpoints lead to the inhibition of cell cycle progression following DNA damage. A cell-free system derived from Xenopus eggs has been established that reconstitutes the checkpoint pathway inhibiting DNA replication initiation. DNA containing double-strand breaks inhibits replication initiation in a dose-dependent manner. Upon checkpoint activation, a prereplicative complex is assembled that contains ORC, Cdc6, Cdc7, and MCM proteins but lacks Cdc45. The checkpoint is ATM dependent. Cdk2/CyclinE acts downstream of ATM and is downregulated by Cdk2 phosphorylation on tyrosine 15. Cdk2AF/CyclinE is refractory to checkpoint signaling, and Cdc25A overrides the checkpoint and restores DNA replication. This report provides the description of a DNA damage checkpoint pathway that prevents the onset of S phase independently of the transcriptional function of p53 in a vertebrate organism.
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PMID:Reconstitution of an ATM-dependent checkpoint that inhibits chromosomal DNA replication following DNA damage. 1103 Mar 44

Angiotensin II (AII) binds to specific G-protein coupled receptors and is mitogenic in adrenal, liver epithelial, and vascular smooth muscle cells. The H295R human adrenocortical cell line, which expresses AII receptors predominantly of the AT1 subclass, proliferates in response to treatment with AII. The induction and maintenance of cellular proliferation involves a precisely coordinated induction of a variety of genes. As the human genome sequencing projects near completion a variety of high throughput technologies have been developed in order to create dynamic displays of genomic responses. One high throughput method, the gridded cDNA microarray has been developed in which immobilised DNA samples are hybridized on glass slides for the identification of global genomic responses. For this purpose high precision robotic microarrayers have been developed at AECOM. The cyclin D1 gene, which encodes the regulatory subunit of the cyclin D1-dependent kinase (CD1K) required for phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein (pRB), was induced by AII in H295R cells. Abundance of the cyclin D1 gene is rate-limiting in G1 phase progression of the cell-cycle in a variety of cell types. AII induced cyclin D1 promoter activity through a c-Fos and c-Jun binding sequence at -954 bp. Theabundance of c-Fos within this complex was increased by AII treatment. Analysis of AII signaling in adrenal cells by cDNA microarray demonstrated an induction of the human homologue of Xenopus XPMC2 (HXPMC2). The cDNA for XPMC2 was previously shown to rescue mitotic catastrophe in mutant S. Pombe defective in cdc2 kinase function. Further studies are required to determine the requirement for cyclin D1 and XPMC2H in AII-induced cell-cycle progression and cellular proliferation in the adrenal.
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PMID:The application of high density microarray for analysis of mitogenic signaling and cell-cycle in the adrenal. 1119 58

A number of distinct surveillance systems are found in mammalian cells that have the capacity to interrupt normal cell-cycle progression. These are referred to as cell cycle check points. Surveillance systems activated by DNA damage act at three stages, one at the G1/S phase boundary, one that monitors progression through S phase and one at the G2/M boundary. The initiation of DNA synthesis and irrevocable progression through G1 phase represents an additional checkpoint when the cell commits to DNA synthesis. Transition through the cell cycle is regulated by a family of protein kinase holoenzymes, the cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks), and their heterodimeric cyclin partner. Orderly progression through the cell-cycle checkpoints involves coordinated activation of the Cdks that, in the presence of an associated Cdk-activating kinase (CAK), phosphorylate target substrates including members of the "pocket protein" family. One of these, the product of the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene (the pRB protein), is phosphorylated sequentially by both cyclin D/Cdk4 complexes and cyclin E/Cdk2 kinases. Recent studies have identified important cross talk between the cell-cycle regulatory apparatus and proteins regulating histone acetylation. pRB binds both E2F proteins and histone deacetylase (HDAC) complexes. HDAC plays an important role in pRB tumor suppression function and transcriptional repression. Histones are required for accurate assembly of chromatin and the induction of histone gene expression is tightly coordinated. Recent studies have identified an important alternate substrate of cyclin E/Cdk2, NPAT (nuclear protein mapped to the ATM locus) which plays a critical role in promoting cell-cycle progression in the absence of pRB, and contributes to cell-cycle regulated histone gene expression. The acetylation of histones by a number of histone acetyl transferases (HATs) also plays an important role in coordinating gene expression and cell-cycle progression. Components of the cell-cycle regulatory apparatus are both regulated by HATs and bind directly to HATs. Finally transcription factors have been identified as substrate for HATs. Mutations of these transcription factors at their sites of acetylation has been associated with constitutive activity and enhanced cellular proliferation, suggesting an important role for acetylation in transcriptional repression as well as activation. Together these studies provide a working model in which the cell-cycle regulatory kinases phosphorylate and inactivate HDACs, coordinate histone gene expression and bind to histone acetylases themselves. The recent evidence for cross-talk between the cyclin-dependent kinases and histone gene expression on the one hand and cyclin-dependent regulation of histone acetylases on the other, suggests chemotherapeutics targeting histone acetylation may have complex and possibly complementary effects with agents targeting Cdks.
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PMID:Histone acetylation and the cell-cycle in cancer. 1128 73


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