6533b852fe1ef96bd12aa504
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Late Activation of Stress-activated Protein Kinases/c-Jun N-terminal Kinases Triggered by Cisplatin-induced DNA Damage in Repair-defective Cells
Zeljka FiketMaja OsmakJulia DamrotBernd KainaJohannes HülsenbeckBeate KöberleLars HelbigAnamaria BrozovicGerhard Fritzsubject
rho GTP-Binding ProteinsDNA RepairMAP Kinase Kinase 4DNA repairDNA damageDNA damage response; DNA repair; cisplatin-DNA adducts; SAPK/JNKp38 mitogen-activated protein kinasesAntineoplastic AgentsCell Cycle ProteinsAtaxia Telangiectasia Mutated ProteinsProtein Serine-Threonine KinasesDNA and ChromosomesBiologyBiochemistryAtaxia Telangiectasia Mutated ProteinsDNA AdductsMiceRadiation IonizingAnimalsHumansDNA Breaks Double-StrandedMolecular BiologyReplication protein ACells CulturedMice KnockoutKinaseTumor Suppressor ProteinsJNK Mitogen-Activated Protein KinasesCell BiologyMolecular biologyDNA-Binding ProteinsEnzyme Activationc-Jun N-terminal kinasesbiology.proteinCisplatinSignal TransductionNucleotide excision repairdescription
Although stress-activated protein kinases/c-Jun N-terminal kinases (SAPK/JNK) are rapidly activated by genotoxins, the role of DNA damage in this response is not well defined. Here we show that the SEK1/MKK4-mediated dual phosphorylation of SAPK/JNK (Thr-183/Tyr-185) correlates with the level of cisplatin-DNA adducts at late times (16–24 h) after drug treatment in both human and mouse cells. Transfection of platinated plasmid DNA also caused SAPK/JNK activation. A defect in transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair resting on a mutation in Cockayne syndrome group B protein promoted the late SAPK/JNK activation following cisplatin exposure. Signaling to SAPK/JNK was accompanied by activation of Ataxia telangiectasia mutated- and Rad3-related kinase, replication protein A, and checkpoint kinases as well as by the formation of DNA double strand breaks (DSBs). Ionizing radiation-induced DSBs did not provoke SAPK/JNK activation, and inhibition of transcription also failed to provoke this response. Late activation of SAPK/JNK stimulated by cisplatin-induced DNA lesions was reduced in the absence of specific DNA repair proteins, such as xeroderma pigmentosum protein C, pointing to an essential function of individual repair factors in DNA damage signaling to SAPK/JNK. Collectively, the data indicate that late SAPK/JNK activation is triggered by non-repaired cisplatin adducts in transcribed genes and involves replication-associated events, DSBs, tyrosine kinases, Rho GTPases, and specific repair factors.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2011-04-01 | Journal of Biological Chemistry |