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Query: UMLS:C0004135 (
ATM
)
13,001
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The accumulation of DNA repair proteins at the sites of DNA damage can be visualized in mutagenized cells at the single cell level as discrete nuclear foci by immunofluorescent staining. Formation of nuclear foci in irradiated human fibroblasts, as detected by antibodies directed against the
DNA repair protein
MRE11, is significantly disturbed by the presence of the viral oncogene, SV40 large T-antigen. The attenuation of foci formation was found in both T-antigen immortalized cells and in cells transiently expressing T-antigen, indicating that it is not attributable to secondary mutations but to T-antigen expression itself.
ATM
-mediated nibrin phosphorylation was not altered, thus the disturbance of MRE11 foci formation by T-antigen is independent of this event. The decrease in MRE11 foci was particularly pronounced in T-antigen immortalized cells from the Fanconi anaemia complementation group FA-D2. FA-D2 cells produce essentially no MRE11 DNA repair foci after ionizing irradiation and have a significantly increased cellular radiosensitivity at low radiation doses. The gene mutated in FA-D2 cells, FANCD2, codes for a protein which also locates to nuclear foci and may, therefore, be involved in MRE11 foci formation, at least in T-antigen immortalized cells. This finding possibly links Fanconi anaemia proteins to the frequently reported increased sensitivity of Fanconi anaemia cells to transformation by SV40. From a practical stand point these findings are particularly relevant to the many studies on DNA repair which exploit the advantages of SV40 immortalized cell lines. The interference of T-antigen with DNA repair processes, as demonstrated here, should be borne in mind when interpreting such studies.
...
PMID:SV40 large T-antigen disturbs the formation of nuclear DNA-repair foci containing MRE11. 1211 65
The Nijmegen Breakage Syndrome (NBS) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder associated with microcephaly, immunodeficiency, chromosome instability and cancer proneness. The mutated gene that results in NBS codes for nibrin (Nbs1/p95), a
DNA repair protein
that is functionally linked to
ATM
, the kinase protein product of the gene responsible of
ataxia-telangiectasia
(
A-T
). We report the clinical, cytogenetic and molecular characterization of a second case of NBS in Chile detected by us. The patient is a 7 year old Chilean boy from a consanguineous marriage, with microcephaly, immunodeficiency and acute non lymphocytic leukemia (ANLL). As NBS shares chromosomal and cellular features with
A-T
, the cytogenetic studies of this patient also included 3
A-T
patients. Our results showed that the frequency of spontaneous and X rays induced chromosomal aberrations in NBS are higher than in
A-T
cells. DNA analysis revealed that the patient is homozygous for the Slavic mutation 657del5 in the NBS1 gene. This finding and the absence of nibrin in patient's cells, confirmed the clinical diagnosis of NBS in our patient.
...
PMID:[Clinical, cytogenetic and molecular characterization of a new case of Nijmegen breakage syndrome in Chile]. 1544 58
The isolation of the NBS1 gene revealed the molecular mechanisms of DSB repair. In response to DNA damage, histone H2AX in the vicinity of DSBs is phosphorylated by
ATM
. NBS1 then targets the MRE11/RAD50 complex to the sites of DSBs through interaction of the FHA/BRCT domain with gamma-H2AX. NBSI complex binds to damaged-DNA directly, and HR repair is initiated. To collaborate DSB repair,
ATM
also regulates cell cycle checkpoints at GI, G2, and intra-S phases via phosphorylation of SMC, CHK2 and FANCD2. The phosphorylation of these proteins require NBS1 complex. Thus, NBSI has at least two important roles in genome maintenance, as a
DNA repair protein
in HR pathway and as a signal modifier in intra-S phase checkpoints. NBSI is also known to be involved in maintenance of telomores, which have DSB-like structures and defects here can cause telomcric fusion. Therefore, NBS1 should be a multi-functional protein for the maintenance of genomic integrity. Further studies on NBS1 will provide insights into the mechanisms of DNA damage response and the network of these factors involved in genomic stability.
...
PMID:Nijmegen breakage syndrome and DNA double strand break repair by NBS1 complex. 1547 93
The isolation of the NBS1 gene revealed the molecular mechanisms of DSB repair. In response to DNA damage, histone H2AX in the vicinity of DSBs is phosphorylated by
ATM
. NBS1 then targets the MRE11/RAD50 complex to the sites of DSBs through interaction of the FHA/BRCT domain with gamma-H2AX. NBS1 complex binds to damaged-DNA directly, and HR repair is initiated. To collaborate DSB repair,
ATM
also regulates cell cycle checkpoints at G1, G2, and intra-S phases via phosphorylation of SMC, CHK2 and FANCD2. The phosphorylation of these proteins require NBS1 complex. Thus, NBS1 has at least two important roles in genome maintenance, as a
DNA repair protein
in HR pathway and as a signal modifier in intra-S phase checkpoints. NBS1 is also known to be involved in maintenance of telomeres, which have DSB-like structures and defects here can cause telomeric fusion. Therefore, NBS1 should be a multifunctional protein for the maintenance of genomic integrity. Further studies on NBS1 will provide insights into the mechanisms of DNA damage response and the network of these factors involved in genomic stability.
...
PMID:Nijmegen breakage syndrome and DNA double strand break repair by NBS1 complex. 1549 28
DNA repair is required for the genomic stability and well-being of an organism. In yeasts, a multisubunit complex consisting of SMC5, SMC6, MMS21/NSE2, and other non-SMC proteins is required for DNA repair through homologous recombination. The yeast MMS21 protein is a SUMO ligase. Here we show that the human homolog of MMS21 is also a SUMO ligase. hMMS21 stimulates sumoylation of hSMC6 and the
DNA repair protein
TRAX. Depletion of hMMS21 by RNA interference (RNAi) sensitizes HeLa cells toward DNA damage-induced apoptosis. Ectopic expression of wild-type hMMS21, but not its ligase-inactive mutant, rescues this hypersensitivity of hMMS21-RNAi cells.
ATM
/ATR are hyperactivated in hMMS21-RNAi cells upon DNA damage. Consistently, hMMS21-RNAi cells show an increased number of phospho-CHK2 foci. Finally, we show that hMMS21-RNAi cells show a decreased capacity to repair DNA lesions as measured by the comet assay. Our findings suggest that the human SMC5/6 complex and the SUMO ligase activity of hMMS21 are required for the prevention of DNA damage-induced apoptosis by facilitating DNA repair in human cells.
...
PMID:Human MMS21/NSE2 is a SUMO ligase required for DNA repair. 1605 14
DNA is damaged in cells during cell replication, by infection, or by various environmental stresses. The damaged cells stop cell cycle, repair damaged DNA, and when repaired progress into the next cell cycle stage. But when the attempt to repair the damage fails, the cells undergo apoptosis. The most deleterious damage of all is double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs), where
ATM
(
ataxia-telangiectasia
-mutated) serves as a sensor. The
ATM
pathway culminates in DNA repair through nonhomologous end-joining or through homologous recombination. Upon DNA damage, the
DNA repair protein
Ku70/80 translocates into the nucleus, which may be mediated by
ATM
. Previously, we found that pancreatic acinar cells undergo apoptosis upon oxidative stress, and the cell death stems from nuclear loss of Ku70/80. This study aims to investigate whether
ATM
has a role in Ku activation and prevention of cell death induced by oxidative stress (hydrogen peroxide) using A-T fibroblasts stably transfected with human full-length
ATM
cDNA or empty vector. As a result, hydrogen peroxide-induced cell death was augmented in A-T cells transfected with empty vector while cell death was prevented in A-T fibroblasts stably transfected with human full-length
ATM
cDNA. Ku DNA-binding activity induced by hydrogen peroxide treatment was increased in the A-T fibroblasts stably transfected with human full-length
ATM
cDNA compared to that in A-T cells transfected with empty vector. The results suggest that
ATM
may be essential for Ku activation to repair DNA damage from oxidative stress and prevent cell death caused by oxidative stress.
...
PMID:Ataxia-telangiectasia-mutated-dependent activation of Ku in human fibroblasts exposed to hydrogen peroxide. 1734 4
Cell death linked to DNA damage has been implicated in various diseases caused by environmental stress and infection. Severe DNA damage, which is beyond the capacity of the DNA repair proteins, triggers apoptosis. Accumulation of DNA damage has been proposed to be a principal mechanism of infection, inflammation, cancer, and aging. The most deleterious form of DNA damage is double-strand breaks (DSBs), where
ataxia-telangiectasia
-mutated (ATM) is the main transducer of the double-strand DNA break signal. Once the DNA is damaged, the
DNA repair protein
Ku70/80 translocates into the nucleus, a process which may be mediated by
ataxia-telangiectasia
-mutated, a member of the phosphoinositide-3-kinase-like family. The function and stability of Artemis may also be regulated by
ataxia-telangiectasia
-mutated through its phosphorylation upon the occurrence of DNA damage. Interestingly, both Artemis and Ku70/80 are substrates of DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), another member of the phosphoinositide-3-kinase-like family. In this review, we show how Ku and Artemis function in the DNA damage response and the
ataxia-telangiectasia
-mutated signaling pathway and discuss potential applications of agents targeting these DNA damage response molecules in the treatment of inflammation and cancer.
...
PMID:Ku, Artemis, and ataxia-telangiectasia-mutated: signalling networks in DNA damage. 1824 67
The removal of DNA interstrand cross-links (ICLs) has proven to be notoriously complicated due to the involvement of multiple pathways of DNA repair, which include the Fanconi anemia/BRCA pathway, homologous recombination and components of the nucleotide excision and mismatch repair pathways. Members of the SNM1 gene family have also been shown to have a role in mediating cellular resistance to ICLs, although their precise function has remained elusive. Here, we show that knockdown of Snm1B/Apollo in human cells results in hypersensitivity to mitomycin C (MMC), but not to IR. We also show that Snm1B-deficient cells exhibit a defective S phase checkpoint in response to MMC, but not to IR, and this finding may account for the specific sensitivity to the cross-linking drug. Interestingly, although previous studies have largely implicated ATR as the major kinase activated in response to ICLs, we show that it is activation of the
ATM
-mediated checkpoint that is defective in Snm1B-deficient cells. The requirement for Snm1B in
ATM
checkpoint activation specifically after ICL damage is correlated with its role in promoting double-strand break formation, and thus replication fork collapse. Consistent with this result Snm1B was found to interact directly with Mus81-Eme1, an endonuclease previously implicated in fork collapse. In addition, we also show that Snm1B interacts with the Mre11-Rad50-Nbs1 (MRN) complex and with FancD2 further substantiating its role as a checkpoint/
DNA repair protein
.
...
PMID:Snm1B/Apollo mediates replication fork collapse and S Phase checkpoint activation in response to DNA interstrand cross-links. 1846 62
Loss of shelterin components TRF2 or POT1a-TPP1 complex from the chromosome end triggers DNA damage response (DDR) and aberrant DNA repair events. In a recent Nature paper, Chang and colleagues reported that the
DNA repair protein
Mre11 contributes to multiple events at the uncapped telomere, including
ataxia telangiectasia
-mutated (ATM)-dependent signaling, processing of the telomeric G-tail and homologous recombination (HR).
...
PMID:Identity crisis when telomeres left unprotected. 1980 16
Hepatitis B virus X protein (pX), implicated in hepatocarcinogenesis, induces DNA damage because of re-replication and allows propagation of damaged DNA, resulting in partial polyploidy and oncogenic transformation. The mechanism by which pX allows cells with DNA damage to continue proliferating is unknown. Herein, we show pX activates Polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) in the G(2) phase, thereby attenuating the DNA damage checkpoint. Specifically, in the G(2) phase of pX-expressing cells, the checkpoint kinase Chk1 was inactive despite DNA damage, and protein levels of claspin, an adaptor of
ataxia telangiectasia
-mutated and Rad3-related protein-mediated Chk1 phosphorylation, were reduced. Pharmacologic inhibition or knockdown of Plk1 restored claspin protein levels, Chk1 activation, and p53 stabilization. Also, protein levels of
DNA repair protein
Mre11 were decreased in the G(2) phase of pX-expressing cells but not with Plk1 knockdown. Interestingly, in pX-expressing cells, Mre11 co-immunoprecipitated with transfected Plk1 Polo-box domain, and inhibition of Plk1 increased Mre11 stability in cycloheximide-treated cells. These results suggest that pX-activated Plk1 by down-regulating Mre11 attenuates DNA repair. Importantly, concurrent inhibition of Plk1, p53, and Mre11 increased the number of pX-expressing cells with DNA damage entering mitosis, relative to Plk1 inhibition alone. By contrast, inhibition or knockdown of Plk1 reduced pX-induced polyploidy while increasing apoptosis. We conclude Plk1, activated by pX, allows propagation of DNA damage by concurrently attenuating the DNA damage checkpoint and DNA repair, resulting in polyploidy. We propose this novel Plk1 mechanism initiates pX-mediated hepatocyte transformation.
...
PMID:Polo-like kinase 1 activated by the hepatitis B virus X protein attenuates both the DNA damage checkpoint and DNA repair resulting in partial polyploidy. 2062 18
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