Journal article icon

Journal article

Phosphorylation of the Bloom's syndrome helicase and its role in recovery from S-phase arrest.

Abstract:
Bloom's syndrome (BS) is a human genetic disorder associated with cancer predisposition. The BS gene product, BLM, is a member of the RecQ helicase family, which is required for the maintenance of genome stability in all organisms. In budding and fission yeasts, loss of RecQ helicase function confers sensitivity to inhibitors of DNA replication, such as hydroxyurea (HU), by failure to execute normal cell cycle progression following recovery from such an S-phase arrest. We have examined the role of the human BLM protein in recovery from S-phase arrest mediated by HU and have probed whether the stress-activated ATR kinase, which functions in checkpoint signaling during S-phase arrest, plays a role in the regulation of BLM function. We show that, consistent with a role for BLM in protection of human cells against the toxicity associated with arrest of DNA replication, BS cells are hypersensitive to HU. BLM physically associates with ATR (ataxia telangiectasia and rad3(+) related) protein and is phosphorylated on two residues in the N-terminal domain, Thr-99 and Thr-122, by this kinase. Moreover, BS cells ectopically expressing a BLM protein containing phosphorylation-resistant T99A/T122A substitutions fail to adequately recover from an HU-induced replication blockade, and the cells subsequently arrest at a caffeine-sensitive G(2)/M checkpoint. These abnormalities are not associated with a failure of the BLM-T99A/T122A protein to localize to replication foci or to colocalize either with ATR itself or with other proteins that are required for response to DNA damage, such as phosphorylated histone H2AX and RAD51. Our data indicate that RecQ helicases play a conserved role in recovery from perturbations in DNA replication and are consistent with a model in which RecQ helicases act to restore productive DNA replication following S-phase arrest and hence prevent subsequent genomic instability.
Publication status:
Published

Actions


Access Document


Publisher copy:
10.1128/mcb.24.3.1279-1291.2004

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Biochemistry
Role:
Author


Journal:
Molecular and cellular biology More from this journal
Volume:
24
Issue:
3
Pages:
1279-1291
Publication date:
2004-02-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1098-5549
ISSN:
0270-7306


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:100257
UUID:
uuid:3b43f5cb-120c-4367-8a17-6a3c61a52384
Local pid:
pubs:100257
Source identifiers:
100257
Deposit date:
2012-12-19

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP