Chk2 Activation Dependence on Nbs1 after DNA Damage
Open Access
- 1 August 2001
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 21 (15) , 5214-5222
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.21.15.5214-5222.2001
Abstract
The checkpoint kinase Chk2 has a key role in delaying cell cycle progression in response to DNA damage. Upon activation by low-dose ionizing radiation (IR), which occurs in an ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM)-dependent manner, Chk2 can phosphorylate the mitosis-inducing phosphatase Cdc25C on an inhibitory site, blocking entry into mitosis, and p53 on a regulatory site, causing G1 arrest. Here we show that the ATM-dependent activation of Chk2 by γ- radiation requires Nbs1, the gene product involved in the Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS), a disorder that shares with AT a variety of phenotypic defects including chromosome fragility, radiosensitivity, and radioresistant DNA synthesis. Thus, whereas in normal cells Chk2 undergoes a time-dependent increased phosphorylation and induction of catalytic activity against Cdc25C, in NBS cells null for Nbs1 protein, Chk2 phosphorylation and activation are both defective. Importantly, these defects in NBS cells can be complemented by reintroduction of wild-type Nbs1, but neither by a carboxy-terminal deletion mutant of Nbs1 at amino acid 590, unable to form a complex with and to transport Mre11 and Rad50 in the nucleus, nor by an Nbs1 mutated at Ser343 (S343A), the ATM phosphorylation site. Chk2 nuclear expression is unaffected in NBS cells, hence excluding a mislocalization as the cause of failed Chk2 activation in Nbs1-null cells. Interestingly, the impaired Chk2 function in NBS cells correlates with the inability, unlike normal cells, to stop entry into mitosis immediately after irradiation, a checkpoint abnormality that can be corrected by introduction of the wild-type but not the S343A mutant form of Nbs1. Altogether, these findings underscore the crucial role of a functional Nbs1 complex in Chk2 activation and suggest that checkpoint defects in NBS cells may result from the inability to activate Chk2.Keywords
This publication has 62 references indexed in Scilit:
- Caffeine Abolishes the Mammalian G2/M DNA Damage Checkpoint by Inhibiting Ataxia-Telangiectasia-mutated Kinase ActivityJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2000
- Expression of Full-Length NBS1 Protein Restores Normal Radiation Responses in Cells from Nijmegen Breakage Syndrome PatientsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1999
- Activation of Rad53 kinase in response to DNA damage and its effect in modulating phosphorylation of the lagging strand DNA polymeraseThe EMBO Journal, 1999
- Cell cycle-dependent and ATM-independent expression of human Chk1 kinaseOncogene, 1999
- Review: ATM: the protein encoded by the gene mutated in the radiosensitive syndrome ataxia-telangiectasiaInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1999
- Radiation Induction of p53 in Cells from Nijmegen Breakage Syndrome Is Defective but Not Similar to Ataxia-TelangiectasiaBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1998
- THE GENETIC DEFECT IN ATAXIA-TELANGIECTASIAAnnual Review of Immunology, 1997
- A variant of the Nijmegen breakage syndrome with unusual cytogenetic features and intermediate cellular radiosensitivity.Journal of Medical Genetics, 1997
- Cell Cycle Checkpoints and DNA Repair in Nijmegen Breakage SyndromeClinical Immunology and Immunopathology, 1997
- Defect in Multiple Cell Cycle Checkpoints in Ataxia-Telangiectasia PostirradiationPublished by Elsevier ,1996