Brca2 (XRCC11) Deficiency Results in Radioresistant DNA Synthesis and a Higher Frequency of Spontaneous Deletions

2002 Molecular and Cellular Biology 248 citations

Abstract

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.

Keywords

BiologyRAD51Genome instabilityMolecular biologyDNA repairHomologous recombinationRadioresistanceBRCA2 ProteinGeneticsDNA damageChromosome instabilityMutationGeneDNACancer researchChromosomeCell cultureGermline mutation

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Year
2002
Type
article
Volume
22
Issue
2
Pages
669-679
Citations
248
Access
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Maria Kraakman-van der Zwet, Wilhelmina J. I. Overkamp, Rebecca E. E. van Lange et al. (2002). Brca2 (XRCC11) Deficiency Results in Radioresistant DNA Synthesis and a Higher Frequency of Spontaneous Deletions. Molecular and Cellular Biology , 22 (2) , 669-679. https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.22.2.669-679.2002

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DOI
10.1128/mcb.22.2.669-679.2002