The xeroderma pigmentosum variant (XPV) is a genetic disease involving high levels of solar-induced cancer that has normal excision repair but shows defective DNA replication after UV irradiation because of mutations in the damage-specific polymerase hRAD30. We previously found that the induction of sister chromatid exchanges by UV irradiation was greatly enhanced in transformed XPV cells, indicating the activation of a recombination pathway. We now have identified that XPV cells make use of a homologous recombination pathway involving the hMre11/hRad50/Nbs1 protein complex, but not the Rad51 recombination pathway. The hMre11 complexes form at arrested replication forks, in association with proliferating cell nuclear antigen. In x-ray-damaged cells, in contrast, there is no association between hMre11 and proliferating cell nuclear antigen. This recombination pathway assumes greater importance in transformed XPV cells that lack a functional p53 pathway and can be detected at lower frequencies in excision-defective XPA fibroblasts and normal cells. DNA replication arrest after UV damage, and the associated S phase checkpoint, is therefore a complex process that can recruit a recombination pathway that has a primary role in repair of double-strand breaks from x-rays. The symptoms of elevated solar carcinogenesis in XPV patients therefore may be associated with increased genomic rearrangements that result from double-strand breakage and rejoining in cells of the skin in which p53 is inactivated by UV-induced mutations.
Polymerase eta deficiency in the xeroderma pigmentosum variant uncovers an overlap between the S phase checkpoint and double-strand break repair.
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作者:Limoli C L, Giedzinski E, Morgan W F, Cleaver J E
| 期刊: | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 影响因子: | 9.100 |
| 时间: | 2000 | 起止号: | 2000 Jul 5; 97(14):7939-46 |
| doi: | 10.1073/pnas.130182897 | ||
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