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Distinct domains in Nbs1 regulate irradiation-induced checkpoints and apoptosis

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Difilippantonio, S 
Celeste, A 
Kruhlak, M 
Lee, Y 
Difilippantonio, MJ 

Abstract

The chromosomal instability syndromes Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS) and ataxia telangiectasia (AT) share many overlapping phenotypes, including cancer predisposition, radiation sensitivity, cell-cycle checkpoint defects, immunodeficiency, and gonadal dysfunction. The NBS protein Nbs1 is not only a downstream target of AT mutated (ATM) kinase but also acts upstream, promoting optimal ATM activation, ATM recruitment to breaks, and ATM accessibility to substrates. By reconstituting Nbs1 knockout mice with bacterial artificial chromosomes, we have assessed the contribution of distinct regions of Nbs1 to the ATM-dependent DNA damage response. We fi nd that T cell and oocyte development, as well as DNA damage-induced G2/M and S phase checkpoint arrest and radiation survival are dependent on the N-terminal forkhead-associated domain, but not on the principal residues phosphorylated by ATM (S278 and S343) or on the evolutionarily conserved C-terminal region of Nbs1. However, the C-terminal region regulates irradiation-induced apoptosis. These studies provide insight into the complex interplay between Nbs1 and ATM in the DNA damage response.

Description

Keywords

double-strand breaks, mre11 complex, ataxia-telangiectasia, ionizing-radiation, s-phase checkpoint, atm activation, DNA-damage-response, forkhead-associated domain, mre11-rad50-nbs1 complex, nijmegen-breakage-syndrome

Journal Title

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0022-1007
0022-1007

Volume Title

204

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press
Sponsorship
Cancer Research Uk (None)