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Query: UNIPROT:P16104 (
H2AX
)
3,930
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
ataxia-telangiectasia mutated
(
ATM
) protein kinase is activated in response to ionizing radiation (IR) and activates downstream DNA-damage signaling pathways. Although the role of
ATM
in the cellular response to ionizing radiation has been well characterized, its role in response to other DNA-damaging agents is less well defined. We previously showed that genistein, a naturally occurring isoflavonoid, induced increased ATM protein kinase activity,
ATM
-dependent phosphorylation of p53 on serine 15 and activation of the DNA-binding properties of p53. Here, we show that genistein also induces phosphorylation of p53 at serines 6, 9, 20, 46, and 392, and that genistein-induced accumulation and phosphorylation of p53 is reduced in two
ATM
-deficient human cell lines. Also, we show that genistein induces phosphorylation of
ATM
on serine 1981 and phosphorylation of histone
H2AX
on serine 139. The related bioflavonoids, daidzein and biochanin A, did not induce either phosphorylation of p53 or
ATM
at these sites. Like genistein, quercetin induced phosphorylation of
ATM
on serine 1981, and
ATM
-dependent phosphorylation of histone
H2AX
on serine 139; however, p53 accumulation and phosphorylation on serines 6, 9, 15, 20, 46, and 392 occurred in
ATM
-deficient cells, indicating that
ATM
is not required for quercetin-induced phosphorylation of p53. Our data suggest that genistein and quercetin induce different DNA-damage induced signaling pathways that, in the case of genistein, are highly
ATM
-dependent but, in the case of quercetin, may be
ATM
-dependent only for some downstream targets.
...
PMID:The isoflavonoids genistein and quercetin activate different stress signaling pathways as shown by analysis of site-specific phosphorylation of ATM, p53 and histone H2AX. 1517 39
DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) mobilize DNA-repair machinery and cell cycle checkpoint by activating the
ataxia-telangiectasia
(
A-T
) mutated (ATM). Here we show that ATM kinase activity is inhibited by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) in vitro. It was shown by biochemical fractionation procedure that PARP-1 as well as ATM increases at chromatin level after induction of DSB with neocarzinostatin (NCS). Phosphorylation of histone
H2AX
on serine 139 and p53 on serine 15 in Parp-1 knockout (Parp-1(-/-)) mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF) was significantly induced by NCS treatment compared with MEF derived from wild-type (Parp-1(+/+)) mouse. NCS-induced phosphorylation of histone
H2AX
on serine 139 in Parp-1(-/-) embryonic stem cell (ES) clones was also higher than that in Parp-1(+/+) ES clone. Furthermore, in vitro, PARP-1 inhibited phosphorylation of p53 on serine 15 and (32)P-incorporation into p53 by ATM in a DNA-dependent manner. These results suggest that PARP-1 negatively regulates ATM kinase activity in response to DSB.
...
PMID:Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 inhibits ATM kinase activity in DNA damage response. 1517 48
Telomere shortening in normal human cells causes replicative senescence, a p53-dependent growth arrest state, which is thought to represent an innate defence against tumour progression. However, although it has been postulated that critical telomere loss generates a 'DNA damage' signal, the signalling pathway(s) that alerts cells to short dysfunctional telomeres remains only partially defined. We show that senescence in human fibroblasts is associated with focal accumulation of gamma-
H2AX
and phosphorylation of Chk2, known mediators of the
ataxia-telangiectasia mutated
regulated signalling pathway activated by DNA double-strand breaks. Both these responses increased in cells grown beyond senescence through inactivation of p53 and pRb, indicating that they are driven by continued cell division and not a consequence of senescence. gamma-
H2AX
(though not Chk2) was shown to associate directly with telomeric DNA. Furthermore, inactivation of Chk2 in human fibroblasts led to a fall in p21(waf1) expression and an extension of proliferative lifespan, consistent with failure to activate p53. Thus, Chk2 forms an essential component of a common pathway signalling cell cycle arrest in response to both telomere erosion and DNA damage.
...
PMID:DNA damage checkpoint kinase Chk2 triggers replicative senescence. 1519 2
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
DNA damage that is not repaired with high fidelity can lead to chromosomal aberrations or mitotic cell death. To date, it is unclear what factors control the ultimate fate of a cell receiving low levels of DNA damage (i.e. survival at the risk of increased mutation or cell death). We investigated whether DNA damage could be introduced into human cells at a level and frequency that could evade detection by cellular sensors of DNA damage. To achieve this, we exposed cells to equivalent doses of ionizing radiation delivered at either a high dose rate (HDR) or a continuous low dose rate (LDR). We observed reduced activation of the DNA damage sensor
ataxia-telangiectasia mutated
(
ATM
) and its downstream target histone H2A variant (
H2AX
) following LDR compared with HDR exposures in both cancerous and normal human cells. This lack of DNA damage signaling was associated with increased amounts of cell killing following LDR exposures. Increased killing by LDR radiation has been previously termed the "inverse dose rate effect," an effect for which no clear molecular processes have been described. These LDR effects could be abrogated by the preactivation of
ATM
or simulated in HDR-treated cells by inhibiting
ATM
function. These data are the first to demonstrate that DNA damage introduced at a reduced rate does not activate the DNA damage sensor
ATM
and that failure to activate
ATM
-associated repair pathways contributes to the increased lethality of continuous LDR radiation exposures. This inactivation may reflect one strategy by which cells avoid accumulating mutations as a result of error-prone DNA repair and may have a broad range of implications for carcinogenesis and, potentially, the clinical treatment of solid tumors.
...
PMID:Evasion of early cellular response mechanisms following low level radiation-induced DNA damage. 1537 58
Arsenic compounds, which are well-documented human carcinogens, are now used in cancer therapy. Knowledge of the mechanism by which arsenic exerts its toxicity may help in designing a more effective regimen for therapy. In this study, we showed that arsenite could induce prominent mitotic arrest in CGL-2 cells and demonstrated the presence of damaged DNA in arsenite-arrested mitotic cells. We then explored why these cells with arsenite-induced DNA damage were arrested at mitosis instead of G2 stage. When synchronized CGL-2 cells were treated with arsenite at stage G1, S or G2, all progressed into, and arrested at, the mitotic stage and contained damaged DNA, as demonstrated by the appearance of the DNA double-strand break marker, phosphorylated
histone H2A.X
(gamma-
H2AX
). Since X-irradiation induced G2 arrest in CGL-2 cells, these cells clearly have a functional G2 DNA damage checkpoint. However, treatment of X-irradiated CGL-2 cells with arsenite resulted in a decrease in G2 cells and an increase in mitotic cells, suggesting that arsenite may inhibit activation of the G2 DNA damage checkpoint and thus allow cells with damaged DNA to proceed from G2 into mitosis. Immunoblot analysis confirmed that arsenite treatment reduced the X-irradiation-induced phosphorylation of both
ataxia-telangiectasia
, mutated at serine 1981 and Cdc25C at serine 216, events which are crucial for G2 checkpoint activation and G2 arrest. Moreover, a higher frequency of apoptotic cells is observed in mitotic CGL-2 cells arrested by arsenite than those arrested by nocodazole or taxol. Our results show that the combined effects of arsenite in inducing DNA damages, inhibiting the activation of G2 checkpoint, and arresting cells with damaged DNA in the mitotic stage may subsequently enhance the induction of apoptosis in arsenite-arrested mitotic CGL-2 cells.
...
PMID:Arsenite induces prominent mitotic arrest via inhibition of G2 checkpoint activation in CGL-2 cells. 1547 1
Ionizing radiation induces autophosphorylation of the
ataxia-telangiectasia mutated
(
ATM
) protein kinase on serine 1981; however, the precise mechanisms that regulate
ATM
activation are not fully understood. Here, we show that the protein phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid (OA) induces autophosphorylation of
ATM
on serine 1981 in unirradiated cells at concentrations that inhibit protein phosphatase 2A-like activity in vitro. OA did not induce gamma-
H2AX
foci, suggesting that it induces
ATM
autophosphorylation by inactivation of a protein phosphatase rather than by inducing DNA double-strand breaks. In support of this, we show that
ATM
interacts with the scaffolding (A) subunit of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), that the scaffolding and catalytic (C) subunits of PP2A interact with
ATM
in undamaged cells and that immunoprecipitates of
ATM
from undamaged cells contain PP2A-like protein phosphatase activity. Moreover, we show that IR induces phosphorylation-dependent dissociation of PP2A from
ATM
and loss of the associated protein phosphatase activity. We propose that PP2A plays an important role in the regulation of
ATM
autophosphorylation and activity in vivo.
...
PMID:Autophosphorylation of ataxia-telangiectasia mutated is regulated by protein phosphatase 2A. 1551 Feb 16
The hereditary disorder ataxia telangiectasia (A-T) is associated with striking cellular radiosensitivity that cannot be attributed to the characterized cell cycle checkpoint defects. By epistasis analysis, we show that
ataxia telangiectasia mutated protein
(
ATM
) and Artemis, the protein defective in patients with RS-SCID, function in a common double-strand break (DSB) repair pathway that also requires
H2AX
, 53BP1, Nbs1, Mre11, and DNA-PK. We show that radiation-induced Artemis hyperphosphorylation is
ATM
dependent. The DSB repair process requires Artemis nuclease activity and rejoins approximately 10% of radiation-induced DSBs. Our findings are consistent with a model in which
ATM
is required for Artemis-dependent processing of double-stranded ends with damaged termini. We demonstrate that Artemis is a downstream component of the
ATM
signaling pathway required uniquely for the DSB repair function but dispensable for
ATM
-dependent cell cycle checkpoint arrest. The significant radiosensitivity of Artemis-deficient cells demonstrates the importance of this component of DSB repair to survival.
...
PMID:A pathway of double-strand break rejoining dependent upon ATM, Artemis, and proteins locating to gamma-H2AX foci. 1557 27
Ataxia telangiectasia mutated
protein (ATM) is a damage response kinase that initiates a signal transduction response to the presence of DNA double strand breaks (DSBs) regulating cell cycle checkpoint arrest and apoptosis. Indirect evidence has argued that
A-T
cells also harbour a repair defect since unrepaired DSBs can be observed in non-replicating
A-T
cells after ionising radiation (IR). The basis underlying such a repair defect has remained unexplained, however. Artemis, a nuclease, whose activity is modified by phosphorylation in vitro, was recently identified as a novel ATM substrate. Artemis and ATM function in a common pathway required for the processing of a subset of double stranded DNA ends induced by IR prior to rejoining by non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ). This subset of DSBs are those normally rejoined with slow kinetics. Additional components of the ATM signal transduction pathway, Nbs1, Mre11,
H2AX
and 53BP1, are also required for this component of DSB repair. This process substantially contributes to survival post irradiation. Our findings add a new dimension to the ATM signal transduction response demonstrating ATM-dependent regulation of an end-processing mechanism that functions during the cell cycle delay effected by ATM.
...
PMID:Artemis links ATM to double strand break rejoining. 1568 9
Budding yeast Rad9 (scRad9) plays a central role in mediating Mec1-dependent phosphorylation by recruiting its downstream substrates. The human scRad9 orthologues 53BP1 and NFBD1 associate with ionizing radiation-induced foci (IRIF) at sites of DNA repair. RNAi-based gene silencing of 53BP1 or NFBD1 has shown impaired phosphorylation of SQ/TQ [
ataxia-telangiectasia mutated
/ATM and Rad3-related (ATM/ATR) substrates] at IRIF, intra-S, and G(2)-M checkpoints and has thereby revealed essential roles for 53BP1 and NFBD1 in the DNA damage signaling pathway. Whether 53BP1 and NFBD1 are required for activation of kinases and/or for recruitment of substrates at IRIF, however, is not clear. Here we show that both 53BP1 and NFBD1 are required for recruitment of ATR to DNA damage sites, as well as for ATR-dependent phosphorylation in response to DNA damage. NFBD1 is not required for ssDNA generation at DNA damage sites and is not recruited by replication protein A (RPA)-coated ssDNA. We therefore show that recruitment of NFBD1 and/or 53BP1, the factors downstream of
H2AX
, is independent of ssDNA generation and RPA coating, whereas both ssDNA and RPA coating play key roles in regulation of the ATR-dependent pathway. These novel findings help clarify where NFBD1 functions in DNA damage early responses.
...
PMID:NFBD1/Mdc1 mediates ATR-dependent DNA damage response. 1573 98
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