Literature DB >> 18287812

Characterization of the activation domain of the Rad53 checkpoint kinase.

Simona Fiorani1, Guendalina Mimun, Laura Caleca, Daniele Piccini, Achille Pellicioli.   

Abstract

Rad53 protein, the yeast orthologue of the human checkpoint kinase Chk2, presents two highly conserved phosphorylatable threonine residues (T354 and T358) in the activation domain, whose phosphorylation is critical to allow the activation of the kinase. In this study we found that Rad53 protein variants in which alanine and/or aspartate replace the threonine residues 354 and/or 358 do not retain kinase activity and do not undergo auto-phosphorylation, leading to defect in the checkpoint response and iper-sensitivity to DNA damage and DNA replication stress agents. Interestingly, we found that the rad53-T358D mutation severely affects the kinase activity and causes accumulation of the S129-phosphorylated isoform of histone H2A, even during an unperturbed cell cycle, thus indicating the accumulation of spontaneous DNA breaks. We further found that the protein level of Sml1, which is the physiological inhibitor of ribonucleotide reductase, remains high during DNA replication in rad53-T358D cells, suggesting that an inadequate pool of dNTPs in checkpoint defective cells causes the accumulation of spontaneous DNA breaks. In conclusion, our results indicate that phosphorylation of both T354 and T358 residues strongly influences the catalytic activity of Rad53 also in unperturbed cell cycles, and support the notion that Rad53 is essential to preserve genome integrity, by controlling the level of Sml1 and the functionality of ribonucleotide reductase.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18287812     DOI: 10.4161/cc.7.4.5323

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Cycle        ISSN: 1551-4005            Impact factor:   4.534


  28 in total

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3.  Suppression of chromosome healing and anticheckpoint pathways in yeast postsenescence survivors.

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4.  Maintenance of the DNA-damage checkpoint requires DNA-damage-induced mediator protein oligomerization.

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5.  Cdk1 targets Srs2 to complete synthesis-dependent strand annealing and to promote recombinational repair.

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6.  Dynamics of Rad9 chromatin binding and checkpoint function are mediated by its dimerization and are cell cycle-regulated by CDK1 activity.

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7.  Tid1/Rdh54 translocase is phosphorylated through a Mec1- and Rad53-dependent manner in the presence of DSB lesions in budding yeast.

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Review 8.  Taking the time to make important decisions: the checkpoint effector kinases Chk1 and Chk2 and the DNA damage response.

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9.  Loss of yeast peroxiredoxin Tsa1p induces genome instability through activation of the DNA damage checkpoint and elevation of dNTP levels.

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