A Dna-Pkcs Mutation in A Radiosensitive T-B- Scid Patient Inhibits Artemis Activation And Nonhomologous End-Joining
Tarih
2009Yazar
van der Burg, Mirjam
IJspeert, Hanna
Verkaik, Nicole S.
Turul, Tuba
Wiegant, Wouter W.
Morotomi-Yano, Keiko
Mari, Pierre-Olivier
Tezcan, Ilhan
Chen, David J.
Zdzienicka, Malgorzata Z.
van Dongen, Jacques J. M.
van Gent, Dik C.
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Radiosensitive T-B- severe combined immunodeficiency (RS-SCID) is caused by defects in the nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) DNA repair pathway, which results in failure of functional V(D)J recombination. Here we have identified the first human RS-SCID patient to our knowledge with a DNA-PKcs missense mutation (L3062R). The causative mutation did not affect the kinase activity or DNA end-binding capacity of DNA-PKcs itself; rather, the presence of long P-nucleotide stretches in the immunoglobulin coding joints indicated that it caused insufficient Artemis activation, something that is dependent on Artemis interaction with autophosphorylated DNA-PKcs. Moreover, overall end-joining activity was hampered, suggesting that Artemis-independent DNA-PKcs functions were also inhibited. This study demonstrates that the presence of DNA-PKcs kinase activity is not sufficient to rule out a defect in this gene during diagnosis and treatment of RS-SCID patients. Further, the data suggest that residual DNA-PKcs activity is indispensable in humans.