| Literature DB >> 26670043 |
Lili Qin1, Ming Fan1, Demet Candas1, Guochun Jiang2, Stelios Papadopoulos3, Lin Tian3, Gayle Woloschak4, David J Grdina5, Jian Jian Li6.
Abstract
Nuclear DNA repair capacity is a critical determinant of cell fate under genotoxic stress conditions. DNA repair is a well-defined energy-consuming process. However, it is unclear how DNA repair is fueled and whether mitochondrial energy production contributes to nuclear DNA repair. Here, we report a dynamic enhancement of oxygen consumption and mitochondrial ATP generation in irradiated normal cells, paralleled with increased mitochondrial relocation of the cell-cycle kinase CDK1 and nuclear DNA repair. The basal and radiation-induced mitochondrial ATP generation is reduced significantly in cells harboring CDK1 phosphorylation-deficient mutant complex I subunits. Similarly, mitochondrial ATP generation and nuclear DNA repair are also compromised severely in cells harboring mitochondrially targeted, kinase-deficient CDK1. These results demonstrate a mechanism governing the communication between mitochondria and the nucleus by which CDK1 boosts mitochondrial bioenergetics to meet the increased cellular fuel demand for DNA repair and cell survival under genotoxic stress conditions.Entities:
Keywords: CDK1; DNA repair; mitochondrial bioenergetics; radiation
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26670043 PMCID: PMC4684969 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2015.11.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423