Eucaryotic cell nuclei contain a number of different organelles that are highly dynamic structures and respond to a variety of stimuli. Here we investigated the effect of UV irradiation on a recently identified group of organelles, Histone Locus Bodies. Histone Locus Bodies contain at least two main proteins, FLASH and NPAT, and have been shown to be involved in replication-dependent histone gene transcription. We show that these organelles are disrupted after sublethal irradiation and both FLASH and NPAT are degraded, which in turn results in cell-cycle arrest at the S/G2 transition. The effect on the cell cycle is due to reduced transcription of histone genes and restoring normal histone protein levels by stabilizing histone mRNA allows cells to progress through the cell cycle. This provides a novel mechanism of S-phase arrest in response to DNA damage that potentially allows DNA repair before cells continue into mitosis, and thus prevents transmission of genomic alterations.

Bongiorno Borbone, L., De Cola, A., Barcaroli, D., Knight, R., Di Ilio, C., Melino, G., et al. (2010). FLASH degradation in response to UV-C results in histone locus bodies disruption and cell-cycle arrest. ONCOGENE, 29(6), 802-810 [10.1038/onc.2009.388].

FLASH degradation in response to UV-C results in histone locus bodies disruption and cell-cycle arrest

MELINO, GENNARO;DE LAURENZI, VINCENZO
2010-02-11

Abstract

Eucaryotic cell nuclei contain a number of different organelles that are highly dynamic structures and respond to a variety of stimuli. Here we investigated the effect of UV irradiation on a recently identified group of organelles, Histone Locus Bodies. Histone Locus Bodies contain at least two main proteins, FLASH and NPAT, and have been shown to be involved in replication-dependent histone gene transcription. We show that these organelles are disrupted after sublethal irradiation and both FLASH and NPAT are degraded, which in turn results in cell-cycle arrest at the S/G2 transition. The effect on the cell cycle is due to reduced transcription of histone genes and restoring normal histone protein levels by stabilizing histone mRNA allows cells to progress through the cell cycle. This provides a novel mechanism of S-phase arrest in response to DNA damage that potentially allows DNA repair before cells continue into mitosis, and thus prevents transmission of genomic alterations.
11-feb-2010
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore BIO/11 - BIOLOGIA MOLECOLARE
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
G1 Phase; ultraviolet rays; calcium-binding proteins; dna damage; proteasome endopeptidase complex; animals; protein transport; apoptosis regulatory proteins; humans; cell nucleus structures; kinetics; cell line, tumor; histones; nuclear proteins; up-regulation; mice; gene expression regulation; s phase; transcription, genetic; cell cycle
Bongiorno Borbone, L., De Cola, A., Barcaroli, D., Knight, R., Di Ilio, C., Melino, G., et al. (2010). FLASH degradation in response to UV-C results in histone locus bodies disruption and cell-cycle arrest. ONCOGENE, 29(6), 802-810 [10.1038/onc.2009.388].
Bongiorno Borbone, L; De Cola, A; Barcaroli, D; Knight, R; Di Ilio, C; Melino, G; DE LAURENZI, V
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/19444
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