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Query: UMLS:C0004135 (
ATM
)
13,001
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The genetic syndrome Fanconi anemia (FA) is characterized by aplastic anemia, cancer predisposition and hypersensitivity to DNA interstrand crosslinks (ICLs). FA proteins (FANCs) are thought to work in pathway(s) essential for dealing with crosslinked DNA. FANCs interact with other proteins involved in both DNA repair and S-phase checkpoint such as BRCA1,
ATM
and the RAD50/
MRE11
/NBS1 (RMN) complex. We deciphered the previously undefined pathway(s) leading to the ICLs-induced S-phase checkpoint and the role of FANCs in this process. We found that ICLs activate a branched pathway downstream of the ATR kinase: one branch depending on CHK1 activity and the other on the FANCs-RMN complex. The transient slow-down of DNA synthesis was abolished in cells lacking ATR, whereas CHK1-siRNA-treated cells, NBS1 or FA cells showed partial S-phase arrest. CHK1 RNAi in NBS1 or FA cells abolished the S-phase checkpoint, suggesting that CHK1 and FANCs/NBS1 proteins work on parallel pathways. Furthermore, we found that ICLs trigger ATR-dependent FANCD2 phosphorylation and FANCD2/ATR colocalization. This study demonstrates a novel relationship between the FA pathway(s) and the ATR kinase.
...
PMID:The DNA crosslink-induced S-phase checkpoint depends on ATR-CHK1 and ATR-NBS1-FANCD2 pathways. 1498 23
To investigate the repair of clustered lesions within the DNA/chromatin, the focus formation and persistence of foci of the phosphorylated histone protein H2AX and the repair protein
MRE11
were studied in normal cells and in cells lacking DNA-PKcs (M059J) or
ATM
(GM2052D) after irradiation with high-LET nitrogen ions or low-LET photons. There was a rapid formation of
MRE11
and gamma-H2AX foci, and 0.5 h after high-LET irradiation, the number of foci in normal cells correlated well with the number of particle hits per cell nucleus. After 8 h of repair, there were significantly more gamma-H2AX foci than
MRE11
foci remaining in the normal cells, independent of radiation quality. The difficulty in repairing clustered breaks was detected as slower rejoining of DSBs (measured by DNA fragmentation analysis), as quantification of the amount of gamma-H2AX over time, and as a larger fraction of repair foci remaining after 24 h in cells irradiated with high- LET ions. These data indicate that clustered lesions are repaired by a pathway involving the same proteins that repair sparsely distributed breaks. Further, for both low- and high- LET radiation, no reduction of the initial number of gamma-H2AX and
MRE11
foci was detected in M059J cells up to 21 h after irradiation, which was in accordance with a complete absence of DSB rejoining in these cells. In the GM2052D cells there was also a higher level of foci remaining after 21 h; however, this was not accompanied by unrejoined DSBs, indicating that these foci not only represent DSBs but also may be a sign of persistent problems even when breaks are rejoined.
...
PMID:Focus formation of DNA repair proteins in normal and repair-deficient cells irradiated with high-LET ions. 1516 72
NBS1 is the key regulator of the RAD50/
MRE11
/NBS1 (R/M/N) protein complex, a sensor and mediator for cellular DNA damage response. NBS1 potentiates the enzymatic activity of
MRE11
and directs the R/M/N complex to sites of DNA damage, where it forms nuclear foci by interacting with phosphorylated H2AX. The R/M/N complex also activates the
ATM
kinase, which is a major kinase involved in the activation of DNA damage signal pathways. The
ATM
requires the R/M/N complex for its own activation following DNA damage, and for conformational change to develop a high affinity for target proteins. In addition, association of NBS1 with PML, the promyelocytic leukemia protein, is required to form nuclear bodies, which have various functions depending on their location and composition. These nuclear bodies function not only in response to DNA damage, but are also involved in telomere maintenance when they are located on telomeres. In this review, we describe the role of NBS1 in the maintenance of genetic stability through the activation of cell-cycle checkpoints, DNA repair, and protein relocation.
...
PMID:The Nijmegen breakage syndrome gene and its role in genome stability. 1525 9
Hypomorphic mutations of the
MRE11
gene are the hallmark of the radiosensitive
ataxia-telangiectasia
-like disorder (ATLD). Here, we describe a new family with two affected siblings, ATLD5 and ATLD6, now aged 37 and 36, respectively. They presented with late onset cerebellar degeneration slowly progressing until puberty and absence of telangiectasias, and were cancer-free. Both patients were wild-type for
ATM
and NBS1, but compound heterozygotes for
MRE11
gene mutations [1422C-->A, T481K; 1714C-->T, R571X]. The 1422C-->A allele was inherited from the mother, whereas the 1714C-->T, allele paternally inherited, was apparently null as a result of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). Interestingly, the 1714C-->T mutation is the same as previously identified in an unrelated English ATLD family (probands ATLD3 and ATLD4), suggesting an important role for NMD in saving potentially lethal mutations. Lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) derived from ATLD5 and ATLD6 were normal for
ATM
, but defective for Mre11, Rad50 and Nbs1 (the MRN complex) protein expression. Their response to gamma-radiation was abnormal, as evidenced by the enhanced radiosensitivity, attenuated autophosphorylation of
ATM
-S1981 and phosphorylation of the
ATM
targets p53-S15 and Smc1-S966, failure to form Mre11 nuclear foci and defective G1 checkpoint arrest. The fibroblasts, but not LCLs, from ATLD5 and ATLD6 showed an impaired
ATM
-dependent Chk2 phosphorylation. These findings further underscore the interconnection between
ATM
activity and MRN function, which rationalizes the clinical similarity between
ataxia-telangiectasia
(
A-T
) and ATLD.
...
PMID:MRE11 mutations and impaired ATM-dependent responses in an Italian family with ataxia-telangiectasia-like disorder. 1526 80
Nijmegen breakage syndrome is a recessive genetic disorder, characterized by elevated sensitivity to ionizing radiation, chromosome instability and high frequency of malignancies. Since cellular features partly overlap with those of
ataxia-telangiectasia
(
A-T
), NBS was long considered an
A-T
clinical variant. NBS1, the product of the gene underlying the disease, contains three functional regions: the forkhead-associated (FHA) domain and BRCA1 C-terminus (BRCT) domain at the N-terminus, several SQ motifs (consensus phosphorylation sites by
ATM
and ATR kinases) at a central region and
MRE11
-binding region at the C-terminus. NBS1 forms a multimeric complex with hMRE11/hRAD50 nuclease at the C-terminus and recruits or retains them at the vicinity of sites of DNA damage by direct binding to histone H2AX, which is phosphorylated by
ATM
in response to DNA damage. The combination of the FHA/BRCT domains has a crucial role for the binding of NBS1 to H2AX. Thereafter, the NBS1 complex proceeds to rejoin double-strand breaks predominantly by homologous recombination repair in vertebrates, while it also might be involved in suppression of inter-chromosomal recombination even for V(D)J recombination. These processes collaborate with cell cycle checkpoints to facilitate DNA repair, while defects of these checkpoints in NBS cells are partial in nature. A possible explanation for these moderate defects are the redundancy of multiple checkpoint regulations in vertebrates, or the modulator role of NBS1, in which NBS1 amplifies
ATM
activation by accumulation of the MRN complex at damaged sites. This molecular link of NBS1 to
ATM
may explain the phenotypic similarity of NBS to
A-T
.
...
PMID:NBS1 and its functional role in the DNA damage response. 1527 70
The
MRE11
/RAD50/NBS1 complex (Mre11 complex) is a central player in most aspects of the cellular response to DNA double-strand breaks, including homologous recombination, non-homologous end joining, telomere maintenance and DNA damage checkpoint activation. Several of these findings are explained by the unusual enzymatic activities and macromolecular structure of the Mre11 complex. The Mre11 complex possesses an ATP-stimulated nuclease to process heterogeneous DNA ends and long coiled-coil tails to link DNA ends and/or sister chromatids. However, the mechanistic role of the Mre11 complex in checkpoint activation has been unclear until recently. New data suggest that the Mre11 complex can directly activate the
ATM
checkpoint kinase at DNA breaks. These findings, together with newly determined functional interactions, identify the Mre11 complex as an architectural and mechanistic keystone of cellular response events emerging from DNA breaks.
...
PMID:MRE11/RAD50/NBS1: complex activities. 1530 60
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
Ten new patients with
ataxia telangiectasia
-like disorder (ATLD) from three unrelated Saudi Arabian families have been identified aged 5-37 representing the largest cohort of ATLD patients ever identified. They presented with an early-onset, slowly progressive, ataxia plus ocular apraxia phenotype with an absence of tumor development, even in the oldest patient. Extra-neurological features such as telangiectasia, raised alpha-fetoprotein and reduced immunoglobulin levels were absent. No translocations were found in the two investigated patients, and the presence of microcephaly was noted in four out of eight ascertained patients. All patients are homozygous for a novel missense mutation (630G-->C, W210C) of the
MRE11
gene. The cellular consequences of this amino acid change, localized in the nuclease domain of the Mre11 protein, have been determined in fibroblast cultures established from two individuals. They showed high constitutive levels of Mre11 and Rad50 proteins compared with cells from normal individuals but a very low level of the Nbs1 protein. After exposure to ionizing radiation, a dose-dependent defect in ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM)-serine 1981, p53-serine 15 and Chk2 phosphorylation, and p53 stabilization were noted, together with a failure to form Mre11 foci and enhanced radiation sensitivity. Formation of gammaH2AX foci was similar to that seen in normal fibroblasts under the experimental conditions examined. These results emphasize the importance of functional interactions among the three proteins of the Mre11-Rad50-Nbs1 complex and lend support to a role of this complex as a sensor of DNA double-strand breaks, acting upstream of ATM.
...
PMID:Identification and functional consequences of a novel MRE11 mutation affecting 10 Saudi Arabian patients with the ataxia telangiectasia-like disorder. 1557 63
DNA damage surveillance networks in human cells can activate DNA repair, cell cycle checkpoints and apoptosis in response to fewer than four double-strand breaks (DSBs) per genome. These same networks tolerate telomeres, in part because the protein TRF2 prevents recognition of telomeric ends as DSBs by facilitating their organization into T loops. We now show that TRF2 associates with photo-induced DSBs in nontelomeric DNA in human fibroblasts within 2 s of irradiation. Unlike gammaH2AX, a common marker for DSB damage, TRF2 forms transient foci that colocalize closely with DSBs. The TRF2 DSB response requires the TRF2 basic domain but not its Myb domain and occurs in the absence of functional
ATM
and DNA-PK protein kinases,
MRE11
/Rad50/NBS1 complex and Ku70, WRN and BLM repair proteins. Furthermore, overexpression of TRF2 inhibits DSB-induced phosphorylation of
ATM
signaling targets. Our results implicate TRF2 in an initial stage of DSB recognition and processing that occurs before association of
ATM
with DSBs and activation of the
ATM
-dependent DSB response network.
...
PMID:Human telomeric protein TRF2 associates with genomic double-strand breaks as an early response to DNA damage. 1753 57
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