Publication | Open Access
Brca2 (XRCC11) Deficiency Results in Radioresistant DNA Synthesis and a Higher Frequency of Spontaneous Deletions
248
Citations
41
References
2002
Year
GeneticsMolecular BiologyMurine Brca2 GeneMolecular GeneticsCell CycleRadiation BiologyTumor BiologyRadiation OncologyGenome InstabilityRadioresistant Dna SynthesisBrca2 GeneChromosomal RearrangementCancer GeneticsCell BiologyChromatinSpontaneous DeletionsBrca2 DeficiencyDeficiency ResultsMedicineMutagenesis
We show here that the radiosensitive Chinese hamster cell mutant (V-C8) of group XRCC11 is defective in the breast cancer susceptibility gene Brca2. The very complex phenotype of V-C8 cells is complemented by a single human chromosome 13 providing the BRCA2 gene, as well as by the murine Brca2 gene. The Brca2 deficiency in V-C8 cells causes hypersensitivity to various DNA-damaging agents with an extreme sensitivity toward interstrand DNA cross-linking agents. Furthermore, V-C8 cells show radioresistant DNA synthesis after ionizing radiation, suggesting that Brca2 deficiency affects cell cycle checkpoint regulation. In addition, V-C8 cells display tremendous chromosomal instability and a high frequency of abnormal centrosomes. The mutation spectrum at the hprt locus showed that the majority of spontaneous mutations in V-C8 cells are deletions, in contrast to wild-type V79 cells. A mechanistic explanation for the genome instability phenotype of Brca2-deficient cells is provided by the observation that the nuclear localization of the central DNA repair protein in homologous recombination, Rad51, is reduced in V-C8 cells.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1