Literature DB >> 10606667

WRN helicase expression in Werner syndrome cell lines.

M J Moser1, A S Kamath-Loeb, J E Jacob, S E Bennett, J Oshima, R J Monnat.   

Abstract

Mutations in the chromosome 8p WRN gene cause Werner syndrome (WRN), a human autosomal recessive disease that mimics premature aging and is associated with genetic instability and an increased risk of cancer. All of the WRN mutations identified in WRN patients are predicted to truncate the WRN protein with loss of a C-terminal nuclear localization signal. However, many of these truncated proteins would retain WRN helicase and/or nuclease functional domains. We have used a combination of immune blot and immune precipitation assays to quantify WRN protein and its associated 3'-->5' helicase activity in genetically characterized WRN patient cell lines. None of the cell lines from patients harboring four different WRN mutations contained detectable WRN protein or immune-precipitable WRN helicase activity. Cell lines from WRN heterozygous individuals contained reduced amounts of both WRN protein and helicase activity. Quantitative immune blot analyses indicate that both lymphoblastoid cell lines and fibroblasts contain approximately 6 x 10(4)WRN molecules/cell. Our results indicate that most WRN mutations result in functionally equivalent null alleles, that WRN heterozygote effects may result from haploinsufficiency and that successful modeling of WRN pathogenesis in the mouse or in other model systems will require the use of WRN mutations that eliminate WRN protein expression.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10606667      PMCID: PMC102521          DOI: 10.1093/nar/28.2.648

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res        ISSN: 0305-1048            Impact factor:   16.971


  38 in total

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4.  Immunological diagnosis of Werner syndrome by down-regulated and truncated gene products.

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9.  Spontaneous and induced chromosomal instability in Werner syndrome.

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  36 in total

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5.  Homologous recombination resolution defect in werner syndrome.

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8.  Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 regulates both the exonuclease and helicase activities of the Werner syndrome protein.

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9.  WRN helicase defective in the premature aging disorder Werner syndrome genetically interacts with topoisomerase 3 and restores the top3 slow growth phenotype of sgs1 top3.

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