Project description:Transcription profiling of ATM (Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated) +/+ (Control), ATM +/- (AT Carrier) and ATM -/- (AT patient) human lymphoblastoid cell lines exposed to 5 Gy IR at 0, 4 and 24 hours to identify expression phenotypes in Ataxia Telangiectasia carriers and patients
Project description:Whole seedlings of wild type (4d) and atm mutants (4d) have been analyzed after a gamma ray irradiation of 0.75h, 1.5h, 3h & 5h (time course). Roots of wt (4d), atm (3d) and atr (4d) mutants have been analyzed after a 1h irradiation.<br><br> Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated (ATM), encodes a large protein with a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-like domain at the C terminus (reviewed by Rotman and Shiloh, 1998). PI3K-related proteins make up a large family of Ser-Thr protein kinases, numerous members of which are involved in the regulation of cell cycle progression, responses to DNA damage, and the maintenance of genomic stability (Hoekstra, 1997). AtATM plays an essential role in meiosis and in the somatic response to DNA damage in plants, similar to the function of ATM in mammals and other eukaryotes.<br>Ataxia telangiectasia-mutated and Rad3-related (ATR) plays a central role in cell-cycle regulation, transmitting DNA damage signals to downstream effectors of cell-cycle progression.
Project description:ATM (ataxia telangiectasia mutated) kinase is crucial to a wide range of human developmental disorders and adult/pediatric malignancies. Its mutations are causally tied to ataxia telangiectasia, a multi-systemic congenital disorder mainly affecting brain and blood systems. We generated 4 separate ATM-knockout human pluripotent stem cell lines and differentiated them to form 3-dimensional brain cortical brain organoids. Brain cortical organoids are an excellent model of human developing cortex. Using these analyses, we identified ATM-dependent phosphorylation predominantly influences factors in neurogenesis, neuronal differentiation, cell morphogenesis, and microtubule cytoskeleton as well as kinases involved in ATM, BNDF, and WNT signaling, G2/M checkpoint, and p53 regulation. These findings have broad implications about diseases associated with ATM, including ataxia telangiectasia.
Project description:Ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) protein kinase regulates the DNA damage response and is associated with cancer suppression. Here, we used microarray to study global transcriptomic expression to identify tumor-promoting functions of ATM.
Project description:Cerebellar cortex expression in ataxia-telangiectasia patients and normal controls. The neurodegenerative disease known as ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is caused by the absence of the ATM (A-T mutated) protein. A long-standing mystery surrounding A-T is why cerebellar Purkinje cells (PCs) appear uniquely vulnerable to ATM-deficiency. Here, we present that 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), a newly recognized epigenetic marker found at high levels in neurons, is substantially reduced in human A-T and Atm-/- mouse cerebellar PCs. TET1, an enzyme that converts 5mC to 5hmC, responds to DNA damage. Manipulation of TET1 activity directly affects neuronal cell cycle reentry and cell death after the induction of DNA damage. Quantitative, genome-wide analysis of 5hmC of samples from human cerebellum showed that in ATM-deficiency there is a remarkable genome-wide reduction of 5hmC enrichment at both proximal and distal regulatory elements. These results reveal a role of TET1-mediated 5hmC in DNA damage response, and provide insights into the basis of a PC-specific DNA demethylation alteration in ATM-deficiency. Human frozen tissue was obtained from the NICHD Brain and Tissue Bank of Developmental Disorders at the University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD. RNA was prepared and run on an Illumina Human HT-12 v4 microarray. 3 ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) cases and 4 normal controls.
Project description:Maintenance of genomic stability depends on the DNA damage response (DDR), a biological barrier in early stages of cancer development. Failure of this response results in genomic instability and high predisposition toward lymphoma, as seen in patients with ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) dysfunction. ATM activates multiple cell cycle checkpoints and DNA repair following DNA damage, but its influence on posttranscriptional gene expression has not been examined on a global level. We show that ionizing radiation (IR) modulates the dynamic association of the RNA-binding protein HuR with target mRNAs in an ATM-dependent manner, potentially coordinating the genotoxic response as an RNA operon. Pharmacologic ATM inhibition and use of ATM-null cells revealed a critical role for ATM in this process. Numerous mRNAs encoding cancer-related proteins were differentially associated with HuR depending on the functional state of ATM, in turn affecting expression of encoded proteins. The findings presented here reveal a previously unidentified role of ATM in controlling gene expression post-transcriptionally. Dysregulation of this DDR RNA operon is likely relevant to lymphoma development in ataxia-telangiectasia individuals. These novel RNA regulatory modules and genetic networks provide critical insight into the function of ATM in oncogenesis.
Project description:Maintenance of genomic stability depends on the DNA damage response (DDR), a biological barrier in early stages of cancer development. Failure of this response results in genomic instability and high predisposition toward lymphoma, as seen in patients with ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) dysfunction. ATM activates multiple cell cycle checkpoints and DNA repair following DNA damage, but its influence on posttranscriptional gene expression has not been examined on a global level. We show that ionizing radiation (IR) modulates the dynamic association of the RNA-binding protein HuR with target mRNAs in an ATM-dependent manner, potentially coordinating the genotoxic response as an RNA operon. Pharmacologic ATM inhibition and use of ATM-null cells revealed a critical role for ATM in this process. Numerous mRNAs encoding cancer-related proteins were differentially associated with HuR depending on the functional state of ATM, in turn affecting expression of encoded proteins. The findings presented here reveal a previously unidentified role of ATM in controlling gene expression post-transcriptionally. Dysregulation of this DDR RNA operon is likely relevant to lymphoma development in ataxia-telangiectasia individuals. These novel RNA regulatory modules and genetic networks provide critical insight into the function of ATM in oncogenesis. B-lymphocyte cell lines GM02184 (wild type, ATM +/+) and GM03332 (AT, ATM -/-) were either untreated or exposed to 1 Gy of IR. 6 h later cells were harvested and used for immunoprecipitation (IP) in the presence of HuR antibody (Santa Cruz Biotech.). RNA from IP material was extracted and used for microarray analysis.