| Literature DB >> 23319047 |
Mayank Singh1, Clayton R Hunt, Raj K Pandita, Rakesh Kumar, Chin-Rang Yang, Nobuo Horikoshi, Robert Bachoo, Sara Serag, Michael D Story, Jerry W Shay, Simon N Powell, Arun Gupta, Jessie Jeffery, Shruti Pandita, Benjamin P C Chen, Dorothee Deckbar, Markus Löbrich, Qin Yang, Kum Kum Khanna, Howard J Worman, Tej K Pandita.
Abstract
The human LMNA gene encodes the essential nuclear envelope proteins lamin A and C (lamin A/C). Mutations in LMNA result in altered nuclear morphology, but how this impacts the mechanisms that maintain genomic stability is unclear. Here, we report that lamin A/C-deficient cells have a normal response to ionizing radiation but are sensitive to agents that cause interstrand cross-links (ICLs) or replication stress. In response to treatment with ICL agents (cisplatin, camptothecin, and mitomycin), lamin A/C-deficient cells displayed normal γ-H2AX focus formation but a higher frequency of cells with delayed γ-H2AX removal, decreased recruitment of the FANCD2 repair factor, and a higher frequency of chromosome aberrations. Similarly, following hydroxyurea-induced replication stress, lamin A/C-deficient cells had an increased frequency of cells with delayed disappearance of γ-H2AX foci and defective repair factor recruitment (Mre11, CtIP, Rad51, RPA, and FANCD2). Replicative stress also resulted in a higher frequency of chromosomal aberrations as well as defective replication restart. Taken together, the data can be interpreted to suggest that lamin A/C has a role in the restart of stalled replication forks, a prerequisite for initiation of DNA damage repair by the homologous recombination pathway, which is intact in lamin A/C-deficient cells. We propose that lamin A/C is required for maintaining genomic stability following replication fork stalling, induced by either ICL damage or replicative stress, in order to facilitate fork regression prior to DNA damage repair.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23319047 PMCID: PMC3592031 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.01676-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Biol ISSN: 0270-7306 Impact factor: 4.272