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)

MRE11-RAD50-NBS1 (MRN) is a conserved nuclease complex that exhibits properties of a DNA damage sensor and is critical in regulating cellular responses to DNA double-strand breaks. NBS1, which is mutated in the human genetic disease Nijmegen breakage syndrome, serves as the regulatory subunit of MRN. Phosphorylation of NBS1 by the ATM kinase is necessary for both activation of the S phase checkpoint and for efficient DNA damage repair response. Here, we report that NBS1 is an acetylated protein and that the acetylation level is tightly regulated by the SIRT1 deacetylase. SIRT1 associates with the MRN complex and, importantly, maintains NBS1 in a hypoacetylated state, which is required for ionizing radiation-induced NBS1 Ser343 phosphorylation. Our results demonstrate the presence of crosstalk between two different posttranslational modifications in NBS1 and strongly suggest that deacetylation of NBS1 by SIRT1 plays a key role in the dynamic regulation of the DNA damage response and in the maintenance of genomic stability.
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PMID:SIRT1 regulates the function of the Nijmegen breakage syndrome protein. 1761 97

The ability of plants to repair DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) is essential for growth and fertility. The Arabidopsis DSB repair proteins AtRAD50 and AtMRE11 form part of an evolutionarily conserved complex that, in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and mammals, includes a third component termed XRS2 and NBS1, respectively. The MRN complex (MRX in yeast) has a direct role in DSB repair and is also required for DNA damage signaling and checkpoint activation in a pathway mediated by the protein kinase ATM. This study characterizes Arabidopsis and maize NBS1 orthologues that share conserved protein motifs with human NBS1. Both plant NBS1 proteins interact with the corresponding MRE11 orthologues, and deletion analysis of AtNBS1 defines a region towards the C-terminus (amino acids 465-500) that is required for interaction with AtMRE11. Arabidopsis lines homozygous for a T-DNA insertional mutation in AtNBS1 display hypersensitivity to the DNA cross-linking reagent mitomycin C, and this phenotype can be rescued by complementation with the wild-type gene, consistent with a function for AtNBS1 in plant DSB repair. Analysis of atnbs1-1 atatm double mutants revealed a role for AtNBS1 in meiotic recombination. While atatm mutants produce reduced seed numbers, plants deficient in both AtATM and AtNBS1 are completely infertile. Cytological analysis of these double mutants revealed incomplete chromosome pairing and synapsis in meiotic prophase, and extensive chromosome fragmentation in metaphase I and subsequent stages. These results suggest a novel role for AtNBS1 that is independent of AtATM-mediated signaling and functions in the very early stages of meiosis.
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PMID:NBS1 is involved in DNA repair and plays a synergistic role with ATM in mediating meiotic homologous recombination in plants. 1767 43

Human telomeres are associated with ATM and the protein complex consisting of MRE11, RAD50 and NBS1 (MRN), which are central to maintaining genomic stability. Here we show that when targeted to telomeres, wild-type RAD50 downregulates telomeric association of TRF1, a negative regulator of telomere maintenance. TRF1 binding to telomeres is upregulated in cells deficient in NBS1 or under ATM inhibition. The TRF1 association with telomeres induced by ATM inhibition is abrogated in cells lacking MRE11 or NBS1, suggesting that MRN and ATM function in the same pathway controlling TRF1 binding to telomeres. The ability of TRF1 to interact with telomeric DNA in vitro is impaired by ATM-mediated phosphorylation. We propose that MRN is required for TRF1 phosphorylation by ATM and that such phosphorylation results in the release of TRF1 from telomeres, promoting telomerase access to the ends of telomeres.
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PMID:MRE11-RAD50-NBS1 and ATM function as co-mediators of TRF1 in telomere length control. 1769 70

Despite a considerable amount of data, evaluation of the potential genotoxicity and cancer proneness of lead compounds remains unclear, probably due to the plethora of experimental procedures, biological endpoints and cellular models used. In parallel, the understanding in DNA damage formation, repair and signaling has considerably progressed all along these last years, notably for DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Here, were examined DNA damage formation and repair in human cells exposed to lead nitrate (Pb(NO(3))(2)) and their consequences upon the ATM-dependent stress signaling, cell cycle progression and cell death. As observed with anti-pH2AX immunofluorescence, exposure to Pb(NO(3))(2) results in formation of late DSBs, that would not originate from conversion of nucleotide damage but likely by a direct production of single-strand breaks. Lead contamination inhibits non-homologous end-joining repair process by preventing the DNA-PK kinase activity whereas the MRE11-dependent repair pathway is exacerbated. Lead contamination triggers successive synchronization of cells in G2/M phase in which the RAD51-dependent homologous recombination was found to be activated. Altogether, our findings support that lead contamination generates late unrepairable DSBs that impact upon the ATM-dependent stress signaling pathway by favoring propagation of errors. Such findings should help to consider more carefully the biological action of lead compounds in the frame of public and occupational exposures.
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PMID:Lead contamination results in late and slowly repairable DNA double-strand breaks and impacts upon the ATM-dependent signaling pathways. 1785 27

DNA damage response (DDR) pathways maintain genomic stability. A 657del5 mutation of NBS1, a key DDR component, causing the rare cancer-predisposing Nijmegen breakage syndrome has been reported nearly exclusively in Slavic populations. In this study, we describe the first identification in a Japanese population of an unprecedented type of heterozygous NBS1 mutant, termed IVS11+2insT, lacking the MRE11- and ATM-binding site at the COOH terminus. Profoundly defective in crucial binding to MRE11, MDC1, BRCA1, and wild-type NBS1, the mutant caused impaired ATM phosphorylation in response to low-dose irradiation in a heterozygous state. Importantly, whereas IVS11+2insT was found in only 2 (0.09%) of 2,348 control subjects, it was identified in 2% (2 of 96) of heterozygotes with gastric cancer, 0.8% (3 of 376) of those with colorectal cancer, and 0.4% (2 of 532) of those with lung cancer, which were comparable to frequencies reported for other DDR-related genes known to confer cancer susceptibility. The presence of the heterozygous IVS11+2insT mutation seemed to be associated with an increased risk for gastrointestinal cancers, with an odds ratio of 12.6 and 95% confidence interval (95% CI) of 2.05 to 132.1 (P = 0.0001). The odds ratios separately calculated for gastric and colorectal cancers were 25.0 (95% CI, 1.78-346.0) and 9.43 (95% CI, 1.08-113.1), respectively. These findings suggest that IVS11+2insT is associated with an increased risk for the development of certain types of common cancers, warranting future investigation including detailed phenotypic characterization of age of onset and penetrance in heterozygotes, as well as screening in other ethnic groups.
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PMID:Novel NBS1 heterozygous germ line mutation causing MRE11-binding domain loss predisposes to common types of cancer. 1805 40

DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are critical lesions that can result in cell death or a wide variety of genetic alterations including large- or small-scale deletions, loss of heterozygosity, translocations, and chromosome loss. DSBs are repaired by non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) and homologous recombination (HR), and defects in these pathways cause genome instability and promote tumorigenesis. DSBs arise from endogenous sources including reactive oxygen species generated during cellular metabolism, collapsed replication forks, and nucleases, and from exogenous sources including ionizing radiation and chemicals that directly or indirectly damage DNA and are commonly used in cancer therapy. The DSB repair pathways appear to compete for DSBs, but the balance between them differs widely among species, between different cell types of a single species, and during different cell cycle phases of a single cell type. Here we review the regulatory factors that regulate DSB repair by NHEJ and HR in yeast and higher eukaryotes. These factors include regulated expression and phosphorylation of repair proteins, chromatin modulation of repair factor accessibility, and the availability of homologous repair templates. While most DSB repair proteins appear to function exclusively in NHEJ or HR, a number of proteins influence both pathways, including the MRE11/RAD50/NBS1(XRS2) complex, BRCA1, histone H2AX, PARP-1, RAD18, DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (DNA-PKcs), and ATM. DNA-PKcs plays a role in mammalian NHEJ, but it also influences HR through a complex regulatory network that may involve crosstalk with ATM, and the regulation of at least 12 proteins involved in HR that are phosphorylated by DNA-PKcs and/or ATM.
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PMID:Regulation of DNA double-strand break repair pathway choice. 1815 61

Many predictive factors of tumor radiosensitivity have been described. Number of clonogenic cells, proliferation rate, hypoxia and intrinsic radiosensitivity are usually considered as the main parameters of tumor control. Intrinsic radiosensitivity is correlated in a first approach to the ability of the cell to detect and repair DNA damages, and so integrity of the different pathways involved in this function: PARP-1, XRCC1, ATM, p53, MRN complex or BRCA1... Genetic polymorphisms of some of these genes, found in normal lymphocytes, have been correlated to late toxicity of normal tissues. But, in tumors, because of the difficulty to obtain samplings and heterogeneity, accurate molecular analysis is not possible in many cases, and no valuable test of radiosensitivity exist at this moment. For example, TP53 gene has been evaluated in many studies and results regarding its potential as a predictive factor of tumor sensitivity are conflicting. Surviving fraction at 2Gy (SF2) allowed a global evaluation of sensitivity, but the obtention of this parameter often takes a long time and failed in 20 to 40%. Evaluation of double-strand break repair capacity by immunochemistry quantification of phosphorylated forms of ATM, H2AX or MRE11 is an interesting topic. However, discovery of tumor stem cells in a number of epithelial tumors could revolutionize the understanding of radiosensitivity. Combination of genomic and functional techniques are probably essential to better predict this parameter.
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PMID:[Determinants and predictive factors of tumour radiosensitivity]. 1818 56

Physical and chemical agents that induce DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are among the most potent mutagens. The mammalian cell response to DSB comprises a highly co-ordinated, yet complex network of proteins that have been categorized as sensors, signal transducers, mediators and effectors of damage and repair. While this provides an accessible classification system, review of the literature indicates that many proteins satisfy the criteria of more than one category, pointing towards a series of highly co-operative pathways with overlapping function. In summary, the MRE11-NBS1-RAD50 complex is necessary for achieving optimal activation of ataxia-telangiectasia-mutated (ATM) kinase, which catalyses a phosphorylation-mediated signal transduction cascade. Among the subset of proteins phosphorylated by ATM are histone H2AX (H2AX), mediator of damage checkpoint protein 1, nibrin (NBS1), P53-binding protein 1 and breast cancer protein 1, all of which subsequently redistribute into DSB-containing sub-nuclear compartments. Post-translational modification of DSB responding proteins achieves a rapid and reversible change in protein behaviour and mediates damage-specific interactions, hence imparting a high degree of vigilance to the cell. This review highlights events fundamental in maintaining genetic integrity with emphasis on early stages of the DSB response.
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PMID:Early events in the mammalian response to DNA double-strand breaks. 1864 34

Ataxia telangiectasia-like disorder (ATLD) is a very rare variant of ataxia telangiectasia. ATLD is caused by mutations in MRE11 gene. Recently, a new missense mutation, a G-to-C change at nucleotide 630 of the MRE11 gene, was described in 10 ATLD Saudi Arabian patients from three unrelated families. This is the biggest ATLD group of patients that may suggest noticeable heterozygous carriers of G630C mutation in the general population. The aim of the present study was to assess the allelic frequency of this mutation. A cohort of 428 Saudi nationals was studied. The 630G > C mutation was genotyped by direct sequencing. Two individuals with heterozygous G630C mutation were found giving a G/C genotype frequency of 0.5% and a mutant C allele frequency of 0.2%. This indicates the presence of this rare mutation in our population with heterozygous carriers' frequency of 0.5%. The frequency could be higher in geographically isolated families with high consanguinity. Premarital, preimplementation, and prenatal screening for MRE11 G630C mutation could be useful to limit the risk of genetic diseases.
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PMID:Assessment of carriers' frequency of a novel MRE11 mutation responsible for the rare ataxia telangiectasia-like disorder. 1865 30

Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS) is a rare recessive genetic disorder, characterized by bird-like facial appearance, early growth retardation, congenital microcephaly, immunodeficiency and high frequency of malignancies. NBS belongs to the so-called chromosome instability syndromes; in fact, NBS cells display spontaneous chromosomal aberrations and are hypersensitive to DNA double-strand break-inducing agents, such as ionizing radiations. NBS1, the gene underlying the disease, is located on human chromosome 8q21. The disease appears to be prevalent in the Eastern and Central European population where more than 90% of patients are homozygous for the founder mutation 657del5 leading to a truncated variant of the protein. NBS1 forms a multimeric complex with MRE11/RAD50 nuclease at the C-terminus and retains or recruits them at the vicinity of sites of DNA damage by direct binding to histone H2AX, which is phosphorylated by PI3-kinase family, such as ATM, in response to DNA damage. Thereafter, the NBS1-complex proceeds to rejoin double-strand breaks predominantly by homologous recombination repair in vertebrates. NBS cells also show to be defective in the activation of intra-S phase checkpoint. We review here some cellular and molecular aspects of NBS, which might contribute to the clinical symptoms of the disease.
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PMID:Nijmegen breakage syndrome and functions of the responsible protein, NBS1. 1872 61


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