Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ku is a heterodimeric protein composed of approximately 70- and approximately 80-kDa subunits (Ku70 and Ku80) originally identified as an autoantigen recognized by the sera of patients with autoimmune diseases. Ku has high binding affinity for DNA ends and that is why originally it was known as a DNA end binding protein, but now it is known to also bind the DNA structure at nicks, gaps, hairpins, as well as the ends of telomeres. It has been reported also to bind with sequence specificity to DNA and with weak affinity to RNA. Ku is an abundant nuclear protein and is present in vertebrates, insects, yeast, and worms. Ku contains ssDNA-dependent ATPase and ATP-dependent
DNA helicase
activities. It is the regulatory subunit of the DNA-dependent protein kinase that phosphorylates many proteins, including SV-40 large T antigen,
p53
, RNA-polymerase II, RP-A, topoisomerases, hsp90, and many transcription factors such as c-Jun, c-Fos, oct-1, sp-1, c-Myc, TFIID, and many more. It seems to be a multifunctional protein that has been implicated to be involved directly or indirectly in many important cellular metabolic processes such as DNA double-strand break repair, V(D)J recombination of immunoglobulins and T-cell receptor genes, immunoglobulin isotype switching, DNA replication, transcription regulation, regulation of heat shock-induced responses, regulation of the precise structure of telomeric termini, and it also plays a novel role in G2 and M phases of the cell cycle. The mechanism underlying the regulation of all the diverse functions of Ku is still obscure.
...
PMID:Ku autoantigen: a multifunctional DNA-binding protein. 1075 64
Werner's syndrome (WS) is a human disease with manifestations resembling premature aging. The gene defective in WS, WRN, encodes a
DNA helicase
. Here, we describe the generation of mice bearing a mutation that eliminates expression of the C terminus of the helicase domain of the WRN protein. Mutant mice are born at the expected Mendelian frequency and do not show any overt histological signs of accelerated senescence. These mice are capable of living beyond 2 years of age. Cells from these animals do not show elevated susceptibility to the genotoxins camptothecin or 4-NQO. However, mutant fibroblasts senesce approximately one passage earlier than controls. Importantly, WRN(-/-);
p53
(-/-) mice show an increased mortality rate relative to WRN(+/-);
p53
(-/-) animals. We consider possible models for the synergy between
p53
and WRN mutations for the determination of life span.
...
PMID:Mutations in the WRN gene in mice accelerate mortality in a p53-null background. 1075 12
Human aging is a complex process that leads to the gradual deterioration of body functions with time. Various models to approach the study of aging have been launched over the years such as the genetic analysis of life span in the yeast S. cerevisiae, the worm C. elegans, the fruitfly, and mouse, among others. In human models, there have been extensive efforts using replicative senescence, the study of centenerians, comparisons of young versus old at the organismal, cellular, and molecular levels, and the study of premature aging syndromes to understand the mechanisms leading to aging. One good model for studying human aging is a rare autosomal recessive disorder known as the Werner syndrome (WS), which is characterized by accelerated aging in vivo and in vitro. A genetic defect implicated in WS was mapped to the WRN locus. Mutations in this gene are believed to be associated, early in adulthood, with clinical symptoms normally found in old individuals. WRN functions as a
DNA helicase
, and recent evidence, summarized in this review, suggests specific biochemical roles for this multifaceted protein. The interaction of WRN protein with RPA (replication protein A) and
p53
will undoubtedly direct efforts to further dissect the genetic pathway(s) in which WRN protein functions in DNA metabolism and will help to unravel its contribution to the human aging process.
...
PMID:The Werner syndrome. A model for the study of human aging. 1091 57
Mutations in the
p53
tumor-suppressor gene promote increased genomic instability and cancer. Mutations in the WRN gene, encoding a
DNA helicase
, underlie the segmental progeroid Werner syndrome (WS). WS is also associated with increased genomic instability and elevated cancer risk. The
p53
and WRN proteins can engage in direct protein-protein interactions. We report that excess WRN elicits increased cellular
p53
levels and potentiates
p53
-mediated apoptosis. Importantly, cells derived from WS patients exhibit an attenuated and delayed induction of
p53
by UV or by the topoisomerase I inhibitor camptothecin. These results suggest that WRN may participate in the activation of
p53
in response to certain types of DNA damage. Furthermore, the failure to induce
p53
effectively may contribute to enhanced genomic instability and elevated cancer risk in WS patients.
...
PMID:The Werner syndrome protein contributes to induction of p53 by DNA damage. 1102 99
Bloom's syndrome (BS), a rare genetic disease, arises through mutations in both alleles of the BLM gene which encodes a 3'-5'
DNA helicase
identified as a member of the RecQ family. BS patients exhibit a high predisposition to development of all types of cancer affecting the general population and BLM-deficient cells display a strong genetic instability. We recently showed that BLM protein expression is regulated during the cell cycle, accumulating to high levels in S phase, persisting in G2/M and sharply declining in G1, suggesting a possible implication of BLM in a replication (S phase) and/or post-replication (G2 phase) process. Here we show that, in response to ionizing radiation, BLM-deficient cells exhibit a normal
p53
response as well as an intact G1/S cell cycle checkpoint, which indicates that ATM and
p53
pathways are functional in BS cells. We also show that the BLM defect is associated with a partial escape of cells from the gamma-irradiation-induced G2/M cell cycle checkpoint. Finally, we present data demonstrating that, in response to ionizing radiation, BLM protein is phosphorylated and accumulates through an ATM-dependent pathway. Altogether, our data indicate that BLM participates in the cellular response to ionizing radiation by acting as an ATM kinase downstream effector.
...
PMID:ATM-dependent phosphorylation and accumulation of endogenous BLM protein in response to ionizing radiation. 1114 46
Werner syndrome (WS) is an autosomal recessive disease manifested by the premature onset of age-related phenotypes, including diseases such as atherosclerosis and cancer. This mimicry of normal aging with the possible exception of central nervous system manifestations has made it a focus of recent molecular studies on the pathophysiology of aging. In culture, cells obtained from patients with WS are genetically unstable, characterized by an increased frequency of nonclonal translocations and extensive DNA deletions. The WS gene product (WRN) is a
DNA helicase
belonging to the RecQ family, but is unique within this family in that it also contains an exonuclease activity. In addition to unwinding double-stranded DNA, WRN helicase is able to resolve aberrant DNA structures such as G4 tetraplexes, triplexes and 4-way junctions. Concordant with this structure-specificity, WRN exonuclease preferentially hydrolyzes alternative DNA that contains bubbles, extra-helical loops, 3-way junctions or 4-way junctions. WRN has been shown to bind to and/or functionally interact with other proteins, including replication protein A (RPA), proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), DNA topoisomerase I, Ku 86/70, DNA polymerase delta and
p53
. Each of these interacting proteins is involved in DNA transactions including those that resolve alternative DNA structures or repair DNA damage. The biochemical activities of WRN and the functions of WRN associated proteins suggest that in vivo WRN resolves DNA topological or structural aberrations that either occur during DNA metabolic processes such as recombination, replication and repair, or are the outcome of DNA damage.
...
PMID:Unwinding the molecular basis of the Werner syndrome. 1134 59
The Bloom syndrome (BS) protein, BLM, is a member of the RecQ
DNA helicase
family that also includes the Werner syndrome protein, WRN. Inherited mutations in these proteins are associated with cancer predisposition of these patients. We recently discovered that cells from Werner syndrome patients displayed a deficiency in
p53
-mediated apoptosis and WRN binds to
p53
. Here, we report that analogous to WRN, BLM also binds to
p53
in vivo and in vitro, and the C-terminal domain of
p53
is responsible for the interaction.
p53
-mediated apoptosis is defective in BS fibroblasts and can be rescued by expression of the normal BLM gene. Moreover, lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) derived from BS donors are resistant to both gamma-radiation and doxorubicin-induced cell killing, and sensitivity can be restored by the stable expression of normal BLM. In contrast, BS cells have a normal Fas-mediated apoptosis, and in response to DNA damage normal accumulation of
p53
, normal induction of
p53
responsive genes, and normal G(1)-S and G(2)-M cell cycle arrest. BLM localizes to nuclear foci referred to as PML nuclear bodies (NBs). Cells from Li-Fraumeni syndrome patients carrying
p53
germline mutations and LCLs lacking a functional
p53
have a decreased accumulation of BLM in NBs, whereas isogenic lines with functional
p53
exhibit normal accumulation. Certain BLM mutants (C1055S or Delta133-237) that have a reduced ability to localize to the NBs when expressed in normal cells can impair the localization of wild type BLM to NBs and block
p53
-mediated apoptosis, suggesting a dominant-negative effect. Taken together, our results indicate both a novel mechanism of
p53
function by which
p53
mediates nuclear trafficking of BLM to NBs and the cooperation of
p53
and BLM to induce apoptosis.
...
PMID:Functional interaction of p53 and BLM DNA helicase in apoptosis. 1139 66
Werner syndrome (WS) is characterized by the early onset of symptoms of premature aging, cancer, and genomic instability. The molecular basis of the defects is not understood but presumably relates to the
DNA helicase
and exonuclease activities of the protein encoded by the WRN gene that is mutated in the disease. The attenuation of
p53
-mediated apoptosis in WS cells and reported physical interaction between WRN and the
tumor suppressor p53
suggest that
p53
and WRN functionally interact in a pathway necessary for the normal cellular response. In this study, we have demonstrated that
p53
inhibits the exonuclease activity of the purified full-length recombinant WRN protein.
p53
did not have an effect on a truncated amino-terminal WRN fragment that retains exonuclease activity but lacks the physical interaction domain for
p53
located in the carboxyl terminus. Two naturally occurring
p53
mutants found in human cancer displayed a reduced ability to inhibit WRN exonuclease activity. In cells arrested in S phase with hydroxyurea, WRN exits the nucleolus and colocalizes with
p53
in the nucleoplasm. The regulation of WRN function by
p53
is likely to play an important role in the maintenance of genomic integrity and prevention of cancer and other clinical symptoms associated with WS.
...
PMID:p53 Modulates the exonuclease activity of Werner syndrome protein. 1142 32
Bloom syndrome (BS) is characterized by premature aging and high predisposition to various types of cancer. BLM is the causative gene for BS. BLM functions as a
DNA helicase
in the direction of 3' to 5' and small subsets of telomeres colocalize with BLM protein. We investigated telomerase activity and telomere repeat length in the cells from BS patients. In Epstein-Barr-virus (EBV) transformed lymphoblastoid cell lines and lymphoma cells from BS patients, telomerase activity was detected as in the control and compared. The metastatic tumor from BS patient, which had a 9-bp deletion of
p53
DNA showed the strongest telomerase activity. Telomere repeat length in BS cells showed that there is no large difference compared with normal cells. Collectively, the results show that the BLM gene is not a major structural and regulatory factor in maintaining telomere repeat length and telomerase activity.
...
PMID:Telomerase activity in cell lines and lymphoma originating from Bloom syndrome. 1169 6
Bloom's syndrome (BS) arises through mutations in both copies of the BLM gene that encodes a RecQ 3'-5'
DNA helicase
. BS patients are predisposed to developing all the cancers that affect the general population, and BS cells exhibit marked genetic instability. We showed recently that BLM protein contributes to the cellular response to ionizing radiation by acting as downstream ATM kinase effector. We now show that following UVC treatment, BLM-deficient cells exhibit a reduction in the number of replicative cells, a partial escape from the G2/M cell cycle checkpoint, and have an altered p21 response. Surprisingly, we found that hydroxyurea-treated BLM-deficient cells exhibit an intact S phase arrest, proper recovery from the S phase arrest, and intact
p53
and p21 responses. We also show that the level of BLM falls sharply in response to UVC radiation. This UVC-induced reduction in BLM does not require a functional ATM gene and does not result from a subcellular compartment change. Finally, we demonstrate that exposure to UVC and hydroxyurea treatment both induce BLM phosphorylation via an ATM-independent pathway. These results are discussed in the light of their potential physiological significance with regard to the role of BLM in the cellular pathways activated by UVC radiation or HU-mediated inhibition of DNA synthesis.
...
PMID:Bloom's syndrome protein response to ultraviolet-C radiation and hydroxyurea-mediated DNA synthesis inhibition. 1196 Mar 80
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>