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Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar St., SHM-I 321, New Haven, CT 06510, United States.
MEN1, the gene responsible for the cancer predisposition syndrome multiple endocrine neoplasia type I, has been implicated in DNA repair, cell cycle control, and transcriptional regulation. It is unclear to what degree these processes are integrated into a single encompassing function in normal cellular physiology and how deficiency of the MEN1-encoded protein,"menin", contributes to cancer pathogenesis. In this study, we found that loss of Men1 in mouse embryonic fibroblasts caused abrogation of the G1/S and intra-S checkpoints following ionizing radiation. The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, p21, failed to be upregulated in the mutant although upstream checkpoint signaling remained intact. Menin localized to the p21 promoter in a DNA damage-dependent manner. The MLL histone methyltransferase, a positive transcriptional regulator, bound to the same region in the presence of menin but not in Men1(-/-) cells. Finally, p53 retained damage-responsive binding to the p21 promoter in the Men1 mutant. These data indicate that menin participates in the checkpoint response in a transcriptional capacity, upregulating the DNA damage-responsive target p21.
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Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar St., New Haven, CT 06520-8005, USA.
Cells mutant for multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN1) or any of the Fanconi anemia (FA) genes are hypersensitive to the killing effects of crosslinking agents, but the precise roles of these genes in the response to interstrand crosslinks (ICLs) are unknown. To determine if MEN1 and the FA genes function cooperatively in the same repair process or in distinct repair processes, we exploited Drosophila genetics to compare the mutation frequency and spectra of MEN1 and FANCD2 mutants and to perform genetic interaction studies. We created a novel in vivo reporter system in Drosophila based on the supF gene and showed that MEN1 mutant flies were extremely prone to single base deletions within a homopolymeric tract. FANCD2 mutants, on the other hand, had a mutation frequency and spectrum similar to wild type using this assay. In contrast to the supF results, both MEN1 and FANCD2 mutants were hypermutable using a different assay based on the lats tumor suppressor gene. The lats assay showed that FANCD2 mutants had a high frequency of large deletions, which the supF assay was not able to detect, while large deletions were rare in MEN1 mutants. Genetic interaction studies showed that neither overexpression nor loss of MEN1 modified the ICL sensitivity of FANCD2 mutants. The strikingly different mutation spectra of MEN1 and FANCD2 mutants together with lack of evidence for genetic interaction between these genes indicate MEN1 plays an essential role in ICL repair distinct from the Fanconi anemia genes.
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Departments of Genetics and Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut and Texas Children's Cancer Center, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas.
Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) is a cancer susceptibility syndrome affecting several endocrine tissues. Investigations of the biochemical function of the MEN1 protein, menin, have suggested a role as a transcriptional comodulator. The mechanism by which MEN1 inactivation leads to tumor formation is not fully understood. MEN1 was implicated to function in both regulation of cell proliferation and maintenance of genomic integrity. Here, we investigate the mechanism by which MEN1 affects DNA damage response. We found that Drosophila larval tissue and mouse embryonic fibroblasts mutant for the MEN1 homologue were deficient for a DNA damage-activated S-phase checkpoint. The forkhead transcription factor CHES1 (FOXN3) was identified as an interacting protein by a genetic screen, and overexpression of CHES1 restored both cell cycle arrest and viability of MEN1 mutant flies after ionizing radiation exposure. We showed a biochemical interaction between human menin and CHES1 and showed that the COOH terminus of menin, which is frequently mutated in MEN1 patients, is necessary for this interaction. Our data indicate that menin is involved in the activation of S-phase arrest in response to ionizing radiation. CHES1 is a component of a transcriptional repressor complex, that includes mSin3a, histone deacetylase (HDAC) 1, and HDAC2, and it interacts with menin in an S-phase checkpoint pathway related to DNA damage response.(Cancer Res 2006; 66(17): 8397-402).
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Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics, University of Maryland, 3221 H.J. Patterson Hall, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
We report that the halophilic archaeon Halobacterium sp. strain NRC-1 is highly resistant to desiccation, high vacuum and 60Co gamma irradiation. Halobacterium sp. was able to repair extensive double strand DNA breaks (DSBs) in its genomic DNA, produced both by desiccation and by gamma irradiation, within hours of damage induction. We propose that resistance to high vacuum and 60Co gamma irradiation is a consequence of its adaptation to desiccating conditions. Gamma resistance in Halobacterium sp. was dependent on growth stage with cultures in earlier stages exhibiting higher resistance. Membrane pigments, specifically bacterioruberin, offered protection against cellular damages induced by high doses (5 kGy) of gamma irradiation. High-salt conditions were found to create a protective environment against gamma irradiation in vivo by comparing the amount of DSBs induced by ionizing radiation in the chromosomal DNA of Halobacterium sp. to that of the more radiation-sensitive Escherichia coli that grows in lower-salt conditions. No inducible response was observed after exposing Halobacterium sp. to a nonlethal dose (0.5 kGy) of gamma ray and subsequently exposing the cells to either a high dose (5 kGy) of gamma ray or desiccating conditions. We find that the hypersaline environment in which Halobacterium sp. flourishes is a fundamental factor for its resistance to desiccation, damaging radiation and high vacuum.
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Institute for Systems Biology, Seattle, Washington 98103, USA.
We report a remarkably high UV-radiation resistance in the extremely halophilic archaeon Halobacterium NRC-1 withstanding up to 110 J/m2 with no loss of viability. Gene knockout analysis in two putative photolyase-like genes (phr1 and phr2) implicated only phr2 in photoreactivation. The UV-response was further characterized by analyzing simultaneously, along with gene function and protein interactions inferred through comparative genomics approaches, mRNA changes for all 2400 genes during light and dark repair. In addition to photoreactivation, three other putative repair mechanisms were identified including d(CTAG) methylation-directed mismatch repair, four oxidative damage repair enzymes, and two proteases for eliminating damaged proteins. Moreover, a UV-induced down-regulation of many important metabolic functions was observed during light repair and seems to be a phenomenon shared by all three domains of life. The systems analysis has facilitated the assignment of putative functions to 26 of 33 key proteins in the UV response through sequence-based methods and/or similarities of their predicted three-dimensional structures to known structures in the PDB. Finally, the systems analysis has raised, through the integration of experimentally determined and computationally inferred data, many experimentally testable hypotheses that describe the metabolic and regulatory networks of Halobacterium NRC-1.
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