Publication | Open Access
SV40 T antigen interacts with Nbs1 to disrupt DNA replication control
88
Citations
55
References
2004
Year
ChromatinGenome InstabilityMedicineGeneticsNatural SciencesImmunologyT/nbs1 Complex FormationDna ReplicationMolecular BiologyNijmegen Breakage SyndromeAntigen ProcessingChromosomal RearrangementRecombination DynamicCellular Immune ResponseNbs ProteinCell BiologyDna Replication Control
Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS) is characterized by radiation hypersensitivity, chromosomal instability, and predisposition to cancer. Nbs1, the NBS protein, forms a tight complex with Mre11 and Rad50, and these interactions contribute to proper double-strand break repair. The simian virus 40 (SV40) oncoprotein, large T antigen (T), also interacts with Nbs1, and T-containing cells experience chromosomal hyperreplication in a manner dependent on T/Nbs1 complex formation. A substantial fraction of NBS-deficient fibroblasts reinitiate DNA replication in discrete regions, and wild-type Nbs1 corrects this defect. Similarly, synthesis of an N-terminal Nbs1 fragment induced DNA rereplication and tetraploidy, in NBS-deficient but not NBS-proficient cells. Moreover, SV40 origin-containing DNA hyperreplicated in T-containing NBS-deficient cells by comparison with T-containing, Nbs1-reconstituted derivatives. Thus, Nbs1 suppresses rereplication of cellular DNA and SV40 origin-containing replicons, and T targets Nbs1, thereby enhancing the yield of new SV40 genomes during viral DNA replication.
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