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2.
Am J Hum Genet ; 66(4): 1221-8, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10739753

ABSTRACT

Cerebro-oculo-facio-skeletal (COFS) syndrome is a rapidly progressive neurological disorder leading to brain atrophy with calcification, cataracts, microcornea, optic atrophy, progressive joint contractures, and growth failure. Cockayne syndrome (CS) is a recessively inherited neurodegenerative disorder characterized by low-to-normal birth weight; growth failure; brain dysmyelination with calcium deposits; cutaneous photosensitivity; pigmentary retinopathy, cataracts, or both; and sensorineural hearing loss. CS cells are hypersensitive to UV radiation because of impaired nucleotide excision repair of UV radiation-induced damage in actively transcribed DNA. The abnormalities in CS are associated with mutations in the CSA or CSB genes. In this report, we present evidence that two probands related to the Manitoba Aboriginal population group within which COFS syndrome was originally reported have cellular phenotypes indistinguishable from those in CS cells. The identical mutation was detected in the CSB gene from both children with COFS syndrome and in both parents of one of the patients. This mutation was also detected in three other patients with COFS syndrome from the Manitoba Aboriginal population group. These results suggest that CS and COFS syndrome share a common pathogenesis.


Subject(s)
Abnormalities, Multiple/genetics , DNA Helicases/genetics , Indians, North American/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Abnormalities, Multiple/mortality , Abnormalities, Multiple/pathology , Abnormalities, Multiple/physiopathology , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , Cells, Cultured , Child , Child, Preschool , DNA Repair Enzymes , Diseases in Twins/genetics , Female , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Fibroblasts/radiation effects , Genetic Complementation Test , Humans , Male , Manitoba , Phenotype , Poly-ADP-Ribose Binding Proteins , Proteins/genetics , Radiation Tolerance/genetics , Syndrome , Transcription Factors , Twins, Dizygotic/genetics , Ultraviolet Rays
3.
Cancer Res ; 59(5): 1102-8, 1999 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10070969

ABSTRACT

The xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) variant (XPV) is a form of XP that has normal excision repair but shows defective DNA replication after UV irradiation. In developing various transformed fibroblast cell lines from these patients, we have found that there are significant phenotypic changes in transformed cells that seem to correlate with inactivation of p53. After transformation with SV40, XPV cell lines are only slightly UV sensitive, like their primary counterparts, but their sensitization with caffeine and the induction of sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) by UV irradiation are greatly enhanced. After transformation by HPV16 E7, which targets the retinoblastoma cell cycle regulatory gene, there is no change in the UV sensitivity of XPV cells; but, when transformed by HPV16 E6 or E6 and E7 combined, there is a large increase in UV sensitivity and in the induction of SCEs. These changes are not associated with any detectable changes in the reactivation of an externally irradiated luciferase expression vector, the excision of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers from bulk DNA, or unscheduled DNA synthesis and, therefore, do not involve excision repair. We suggest that if SCEs represent homologous recombination between sister chromatids, then in the absence of p53 function, the DNA chain arrest typical of UV-damaged XPV cells initiates strand exchange during recovery. In untransformed cells with normal p53, the preferred mode of recovery would then be replication bypass. The symptoms of elevated solar carcinogenesis in XPV patients may, therefore, be associated with increased genomic instability in cells of the skin in which p53 is inactivated by UV-induced mutations.


Subject(s)
Cell Survival/radiation effects , Genes, p53 , Genetic Variation , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/metabolism , Ultraviolet Rays , Xeroderma Pigmentosum/genetics , Caffeine/pharmacology , Cell Division/drug effects , Cell Division/radiation effects , Cell Line , Cell Line, Transformed , Cell Survival/drug effects , Cell Transformation, Viral , DNA Repair/radiation effects , DNA Replication/radiation effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation , Fibroblasts , Genes, Reporter , Humans , Kinetics , Papillomaviridae/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/biosynthesis , Simian virus 40/genetics , Transfection
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