Publications by Year: 2006

2006
Wen-Hsing Cheng, Rika Kusumoto, Patricia L Opresko, XiuFen Sui, Shurong Huang, Matthew L Nicolette, Tanya T Paull, Judith Campisi, Michael Seidman, and Vilhelm A Bohr. “Collaboration of Werner syndrome protein and BRCA1 in cellular responses to DNA interstrand cross-links.” Nucleic Acids Res, 34, 9, Pp. 2751-60. Abstract
Cells deficient in the Werner syndrome protein (WRN) or BRCA1 are hypersensitive to DNA interstrand cross-links (ICLs), whose repair requires nucleotide excision repair (NER) and homologous recombination (HR). However, the roles of WRN and BRCA1 in the repair of DNA ICLs are not understood and the molecular mechanisms of ICL repair at the processing stage have not yet been established. This study demonstrates that WRN helicase activity, but not exonuclease activity, is required to process DNA ICLs in cells and that WRN cooperates with BRCA1 in the cellular response to DNA ICLs. BRCA1 interacts directly with WRN and stimulates WRN helicase and exonuclease activities in vitro. The interaction between WRN and BRCA1 increases in cells treated with DNA cross-linking agents. WRN binding to BRCA1 was mapped to BRCA1 452-1079 amino acids. The BRCA1/BARD1 complex also associates with WRN in vivo and stimulates WRN helicase activity on forked and Holliday junction substrates. These findings suggest that WRN and BRCA1 act in a coordinated manner to facilitate repair of DNA ICLs.
André Nussenzweig and Tanya Paull. “DNA repair: tails of histones lost.” Nature, 439, 7075, Pp. 406-7.
Zhenkun Lou, Katherine Minter-Dykhouse, Sonia Franco, Monica Gostissa, Melissa A Rivera, Arkady Celeste, John P Manis, Jan van Deursen, André Nussenzweig, Tanya T Paull, Frederick W Alt, and Junjie Chen. “MDC1 maintains genomic stability by participating in the amplification of ATM-dependent DNA damage signals.” Mol Cell, 21, 2, Pp. 187-200. Abstract
MDC1 functions in checkpoint activation and DNA repair following DNA damage. To address the physiological role of MDC1, we disrupted the MDC1 gene in mice. MDC1-/- mice recapitulated many phenotypes of H2AX-/- mice, including growth retardation, male infertility, immune defects, chromosome instability, DNA repair defects, and radiation sensitivity. At the molecular level, H2AX, MDC1, and ATM form a positive feedback loop, with MDC1 directly mediating the interaction between H2AX and ATM. MDC1 binds phosphorylated H2AX through its BRCT domain and ATM through its FHA domain. Through these interactions, MDC1 accumulates activated ATM flanking the sites of DNA damage, facilitating further ATM-dependent phosphorylation of H2AX and the amplification of DNA damage signals. In the absence of MDC1, many downstream ATM signaling events are defective. These results suggest that MDC1, as a signal amplifier of the ATM pathway, is vital in controlling proper DNA damage response and maintaining genomic stability.
Ji-hoon Lee and Tanya T Paull. “Purification and biochemical characterization of ataxia-telangiectasia mutated and Mre11/Rad50/Nbs1.” Methods Enzymol, 408, Pp. 529-39. Abstract
Ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) is a serine-threonine kinase that is activated by DNA double strand breaks to phosphorylate many cellular proteins involved in cell cycle regulation and DNA repair. We have shown previously that the activation of ATM can be reconstituted in an in vitro system using recombinant human ATM. In this system, ATM activity is dependent on the Mre11/Rad50/Nbs1 (MRN) complex and linear DNA, similar to requirements observed in human cells. This chapter describes methods used for the overexpression and purification of human ATM and MRN, as well as a protocol for in vitro kinase assays.