| Literature DB >> 16322227 |
Shahnaz T Al Rashid1, Graham Dellaire, Andrew Cuddihy, Farid Jalali, Mita Vaid, Carla Coackley, Melvyn Folkard, Yang Xu, Benjamin P C Chen, David J Chen, Lothar Lilge, Kevin M Prise, David P Bazett Jones, Robert G Bristow.
Abstract
Despite a clear link between ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM)-dependent phosphorylation of p53 and cell cycle checkpoint control, the intracellular biology and subcellular localization of p53 phosphoforms during the initial sensing of DNA damage is poorly understood. Using G0-G1 confluent primary human diploid fibroblast cultures, we show that endogenous p53, phosphorylated at Ser15 (p53Ser15), accumulates as discrete, dose-dependent and chromatin-bound foci within 30 minutes following induction of DNA breaks or DNA base damage. This biologically distinct subpool of p53Ser15 is ATM dependent and resistant to 26S-proteasomal degradation. p53Ser15 colocalizes and coimmunoprecipitates with gamma-H2AX with kinetics similar to that of biochemical DNA double-strand break (DNA-dsb) rejoining. Subnuclear microbeam irradiation studies confirm p53Ser15 is recruited to sites of DNA damage containing gamma-H2AX, ATM(Ser1981), and DNA-PKcs(Thr2609) in vivo. Furthermore, studies using isogenic human and murine cells, which express Ser15 or Ser18 phosphomutant proteins, respectively, show defective nuclear foci formation, decreased induction of p21WAF, decreased gamma-H2AX association, and altered DNA-dsb kinetics following DNA damage. Our results suggest a unique biology for this p53 phosphoform in the initial steps of DNA damage signaling and implicates ATM-p53 chromatin-based interactions as mediators of cell cycle checkpoint control and DNA repair to prevent carcinogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16322227 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-05-0729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701