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Query: UMLS:C0004135 (
ATM
)
13,001
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
Replication protein A (RPA, also known as human single-stranded DNA-binding protein) is a trimeric, multifunctional protein complex involved in DNA replication, DNA repair, and recombination. Phosphorylation of the RPA2 subunit is observed after exposure of cells to ionizing radiation (IR) and other DNA-damaging agents, which implicates the modified protein in the regulation of DNA replication after DNA damage or in DNA repair. Although
ataxia telangiectasia
-mutated (ATM) and DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) phosphorylate RPA2 in vitro, their role in vivo remains uncertain, and contradictory results have been reported. Here we show that RPA2 phosphorylation is delayed in cells deficient in one of these kinases and completely abolished in wild-type, ATM, or DNA-PK-deficient cells after treatment with wortmannin at a concentration-inhibiting ATM and DNA-PK.
Caffeine
, an inhibitor of ATM and ATM-Rad3 related (ATR) but not DNA-PK, generates an
ataxia-telangiectasia
-like response in wild-type cells, prevents completely RPA2 phosphorylation in DNA-PKcs deficient cells, but has no effect on
ataxia-telangiectasia
cells. These observations rule out ATR and implicate both ATM and DNA-PK in RPA2 phosphorylation after exposure to IR. UCN-01, an inhibitor of protein kinase C, Chk1, and cyclin-dependent kinases, has no effect on IR-induced RPA2 phosphorylation. Because UCN-01 abrogates checkpoint responses, this observation dissociates RPA2 phosphorylation from checkpoint activation. Phosphorylated RPA has a higher affinity for nuclear structures than unphosphorylated RPA suggesting functional alterations in the protein. In an in vitro assay for DNA replication, DNA-PK is the sole kinase phosphorylating RPA2, indicating that processes not reproduced in the in vitro assay are required for RPA2 phosphorylation by ATM. Because RPA2 phosphorylation kinetics are distinct from those of the S phase checkpoint, we propose that DNA-PK and ATM cooperate to phosphorylate RPA after DNA damage to redirect the functions of the protein from DNA replication to DNA repair.
...
PMID:Replication protein A2 phosphorylation after DNA damage by the coordinated action of ataxia telangiectasia-mutated and DNA-dependent protein kinase. 1173 42
We have investigated the mechanism of S-phase arrest elicited by the carcinogen benzo(a)pyrene dihydrodiol epoxide (BPDE) in p53-deficient cells. Inhibition of DNA synthesis after BPDE treatment was rapid and dose dependent (approximately 50% inhibition after 2 h with 50 nM BPDE). Cells treated with low doses (50-100 nM) of BPDE resumed DNA synthesis after a delay of approximately 4-8 h, whereas cells that received high doses of BPDE (600 nM) failed to recover from S-phase arrest. The checkpoint kinase Chk1 (but not Chk2) was phosphorylated after treatment with low doses of BPDE. High concentrations of BPDE elicited phosphorylation of both Chk1 and Chk2. Adenovirus-mediated expression of "dominant-negative" Chk1 (but not dominant-negative Chk2) and the Chk1 inhibitor UCN-01 abrogated the S-phase delay elicited by low doses of BPDE. Consistent with a role for the
caffeine
-sensitive
ATM
or ATR protein kinase in low-dose BPDE-induced S-phase arrest, both Chk1 phosphorylation and S-phase arrest were abrogated by
caffeine
. However, low doses of BPDE elicited Chk1 phosphorylation and S-phase arrest in AT cells (from
ataxia telangiectasia
patients), demonstrating that
ATM
is dispensable for S-phase checkpoint responses to this genotoxin. BPDE-induced Chk1 phosphorylation and S-phase arrest were abrogated by
caffeine
treatment in AT cells, suggesting that a
caffeine
-sensitive kinase other than
ATM
is an important mediator of responses to BPDE-adducted DNA. Overall, our data demonstrate the existence of a
caffeine
-sensitive, Chk1-mediated, S-phase checkpoint that is operational in response to BPDE.
...
PMID:Carcinogen-induced S-phase arrest is Chk1 mediated and caffeine sensitive. 1186 11
The mammalian Chk2 kinase is thought to mediate
ATM
-dependent signaling in response to DNA damage. The physiological role of mammalian Chk2 has now been investigated by the generation of Chk2-deficient mice. Although Chk2(-/-) mice appeared normal, they were resistant to ionizing radiation (IR) as a result of the preservation of splenic lymphocytes. Thymocytes and neurons of the developing brain were also resistant to IR-induced apoptosis. The IR-induced G(1)/S cell cycle checkpoint, but not the G(2)/M or S phase checkpoints, was impaired in embryonic fibroblasts derived from Chk2(-/-) mice. IR-induced stabilization of p53 in Chk2(-/- )cells was 50-70% of that in wild-type cells.
Caffeine
further reduced p53 accumulation, suggesting the existence of an
ATM
/ATR-dependent but Chk2-independent pathway for p53 stabilization. In spite of p53 protein stabilization and phosphorylation of Ser23, p53-dependent transcriptional induction of target genes, such as p21 and Noxa, was not observed in Chk2(-/-) cells. Our results show that Chk2 plays a critical role in p53 function in response to IR by regulating its transcriptional activity as well as its stability.
...
PMID:Chk2-deficient mice exhibit radioresistance and defective p53-mediated transcription. 1254 13
DNA replication is inhibited by DNA damage through cis effects on replication fork progression and trans effects associated with checkpoints. In this study, we employed a combined pulse labeling and neutral-neutral two-dimensional gel-based approach to compare the effects of a DNA damaging agent frequently employed to invoke checkpoints, UVC radiation, on the replication of cellular and simian virus 40 (SV40) chromosomes in intact cells. UVC radiation induced similar inhibitory effects on the initiation and elongation phases of cellular and SV40 DNA replication. The initiation-inhibitory effects occurred independently of p53 and were abrogated by the
ATM
and ATR kinase inhibitor
caffeine
, or the Chk1 kinase inhibitor UCN-01. Inhibition of cellular origins was also abrogated by the expression of a dominant-negative Chk1 mutant. These results indicate that UVC induces a Chk1- and ATR or
ATM
-dependent checkpoint that targets both cellular and SV40 viral replication origins. Loss of Chk1 and ATR or
ATM
function also stimulated initiation of cellular and viral DNA replication in the absence of UVC radiation, revealing the existence of a novel intrinsic checkpoint that targets both cellular and SV40 viral origins of replication in the absence of DNA damage or stalled DNA replication forks. This checkpoint inhibits the replication in early S phase cells of a region of the repetitive rDNA locus that replicates in late S phase. The ability to detect these checkpoints using the well characterized SV40 model system should facilitate analysis of the molecular basis for these effects.
...
PMID:Regulation of cellular and SV40 virus origins of replication by Chk1-dependent intrinsic and UVC radiation-induced checkpoints. 1242 56
DNA topoisomerase II is required in the cell cycle to decatenate intertwined daughter chromatids prior to mitosis. To study the mechanisms that cells use to accomplish timely chromatid decatenation, the activity of a catenation-responsive checkpoint was monitored in human skin fibroblasts with inherited or acquired defects in the DNA damage G2 checkpoint. G2 delay was quantified shortly after a brief incubation with ICRF-193, which blocks the ability of topoisomerase II to decatenate chromatids, or treatment with ionizing radiation (IR), which damages DNA. Both treatments induced G2 delay in normal human fibroblasts.
Ataxia telangiectasia
fibroblasts with defective G2 checkpoint response to IR displayed normal G2 delay after treatment with ICRF-193, demonstrating that
ATM
kinase was not required for signaling when chromatid decatenation was blocked. The G2 delay induced by ICRF-193 was reversed by
caffeine
, indicating that active checkpoint signaling was involved. ICRF-193-induced G2 delay also was independent of p53 function, being evident in cells expressing HPV16E6 to inactivate p53. However, as fibroblasts expressing HPV16E6 aged in culture, they lost the ability to delay entry to mitosis, both after DNA damage and when decatenation was blocked. This age-related loss of G2 delay in response to ICRF-193 and IR in E6-expressing cells was blocked by induction of telomerase. Expression of telomerase also prevented chromosomal destabilization in aging E6-expressing cells. These observations lead to a new model of genetic instability, in which attenuation of G2 decatenatory checkpoint function permits cells to enter mitosis with insufficiently decatenated chromatids, leading to aneuploidy and polyploidy.
...
PMID:Degradation of ATM-independent decatenation checkpoint function in human cells is secondary to inactivation of p53 and correlated with chromosomal destabilization. 1242 35
Inhibition of replicon initiation is a stereotypic DNA damage response mediated through S checkpoint mechanisms not yet fully understood. Studies were undertaken to elucidate the function of checkpoint proteins in the inhibition of replicon initiation following irradiation with 254 nm UV light (UVC) of diploid human fibroblasts immortalized by the ectopic expression of telomerase. Velocity sedimentation analysis of nascent DNA molecules revealed a 50% inhibition of replicon initiation when normal human fibroblasts were treated with a low dose of UVC (1 J/m(2)).
Ataxia telangiectasia
(AT), Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS), and AT-like disorder fibroblasts, which lack an S checkpoint response when exposed to ionizing radiation, responded normally when exposed to UVC and inhibited replicon initiation. Pretreatment of normal and AT fibroblasts with
caffeine
or UCN-01, inhibitors of ATR (AT mutated and Rad3 related) and Chk1, respectively, abolished the S checkpoint response to UVC. Moreover, overexpression of kinase-inactive ATR in U2OS cells severely attenuated UVC-induced Chk1 phosphorylation and reversed the UVC-induced inhibition of replicon initiation, as did overexpression of kinase-inactive Chk1. Taken together, these data suggest that the UVC-induced S checkpoint response of inhibition of replicon initiation is mediated by ATR signaling through Chk-1 and is independent of
ATM
, Nbs1, and Mre11.
...
PMID:An ATR- and Chk1-dependent S checkpoint inhibits replicon initiation following UVC-induced DNA damage. 1244 74
We have analyzed how single-strand DNA gaps affect DNA replication in Xenopus egg extracts. DNA lesions generated by etoposide, a DNA topoisomerase II inhibitor, or by exonuclease treatment activate a DNA damage checkpoint that blocks initiation of plasmid and chromosomal DNA replication. The checkpoint is abrogated by
caffeine
and requires ATR, but not
ATM
, protein kinase. The block to DNA synthesis is due to inhibition of Cdc7/Dbf4 protein kinase activity and the subsequent failure of Cdc45 to bind to chromatin. The checkpoint does not require pre-RC assembly but requires loading of the single-strand binding protein, RPA, on chromatin. This is the biochemical demonstration of a DNA damage checkpoint that targets Cdc7/Dbf4 protein kinase.
...
PMID:An ATR- and Cdc7-dependent DNA damage checkpoint that inhibits initiation of DNA replication. 1253 33
Caffeine
inhibits
ATM
and ATR, two important checkpoint regulators, abolishes ionizing radiation-induced checkpoint response, and radiosensitizes cells. Radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are repaired by two major processes, homologous recombination repair (HRR) and nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ). It remains unclear which repair process, HRR or NHEJ, is affected when the checkpoint responses are abolished by
caffeine
. In this study we observed the effect of
caffeine
on gene-targeted DT40 chicken lymphoblast cells. We show that
caffeine
efficiently abolishes S- and G(2)-phase checkpoint responses after irradiation in all cell lines tested and greatly radiosensitizes wild-type and
ATM
(-/-) cells, the partially checkpoint-deficient cells. However,
caffeine
has a much smaller radiosensitizing effect on RAD54(-/-) cells and has no effect on RAD51-deficient cells. RAD51 and RAD54 are the important factors for HRR. Our results indicate that the checkpoint responses abolished by
caffeine
(S and G(2)) mainly affect HRR, which results in cell radiosensitization.
...
PMID:Caffeine could not efficiently sensitize homologous recombination repair-deficient cells to ionizing radiation-induced killing. 1260 Feb 45
After exposure to ionizing radiation, proliferating cells actively slow down progression through the cell cycle through the activation of checkpoints to provide time for repair. Two major complementary DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair pathways exist in mammalian cells, homologous recombination repair (HRR) and nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ). The relationship between checkpoint activation and these two types of DNA DSB repair pathways is not clear.
Caffeine
, as a nonspecific inhibitor of
ATM
and ATR, abolishes multi-checkpoint responses and sensitizes cells to radiation-induced killing. However, it remains unknown which DNA repair process, NHEJ or HRR, or both, is affected by
caffeine
-abolished checkpoint responses. We report here that
caffeine
abolishes the radiation-induced G(2)-phase checkpoint and efficiently sensitizes both NHEJ-proficient and NHEJ-deficient mammalian cells to radiation-induced killing without affecting NHEJ. Our results indicate that
caffeine
-induced radiosensitization occurs by affecting an NHEJ-independent process, possibly HRR.
...
PMID:Caffeine-induced radiosensitization is independent of nonhomologous end joining of DNA double-strand breaks. 1260 Feb 46
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