Functional interactions between BRCA1 and the checkpoint kinase ATR during genotoxic stress

  1. Randal S. Tibbetts1,
  2. David Cortez2,
  3. Kathryn M. Brumbaugh1,
  4. Ralph Scully3,
  5. David Livingston3,
  6. Stephen J. Elledge2, and
  7. Robert T. Abraham1,4
  1. 1Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA; 2Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030, USA; 3Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA

Abstract

The BRCA1 gene encodes a tumor suppressor that is mutated in 50% of familial breast cancers. The BRCA1 protein has been implicated in the DNA damage response, as DNA damage induces the phosphorylation of BRCA1 and causes its recruitment into nuclear foci that contain DNA repair proteins. The ataxia-telangiectasia-mutated (ATM) gene product controls overall BRCA1 phosphorylation in response to γ-irradiation (IR). In this study, we show that BRCA1 phosphorylation is only partially ATM dependent in response to IR and ATM independent in response to treatment with UV light, or the DNA replication inhibitors hydroxyurea (HU) and aphidicolin (APH). We provide evidence that the kinase responsible for this phosphorylation is the ATM-related kinase, ATR. ATR phosphorylates BRCA1 on six Ser/Thr residues, including Ser 1423, in vitro. Increased expression of ATR enhanced the phosphorylation of BRCA1 on Ser 1423 following cellular exposure to HU or UV light, whereas doxycycline-induced expression of a kinase-inactive ATR mutant protein inhibited HU- or UV light-induced Ser 1423 phosphorylation in GM847 fibroblasts, and partially suppressed the phosphorylation of this site in response to IR. Thus, ATR, like ATM, controls BRCA1 phosphorylation in vivo. Although ATR isolated from DNA-damaged cells does not show enhanced kinase activity in vitro, we found that ATR responds to DNA damage and replication blocks by forming distinct nuclear foci at the sites of stalled replication forks. Furthermore, ATR nuclear foci overlap with the nuclear foci formed by BRCA1. The dramatic relocalization of ATR in response to DNA damage points to a possible mechanism for its ability to enhance the phosphorylation of substrates in response to DNA damage. Together, these results demonstrate that ATR and BRCA1 are components of the same genotoxic stress-responsive pathway, and that ATR directly phosphorylates BRCA1 in response to damaged DNA or stalled DNA replication.

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Footnotes

  • 4 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL abrah008{at}mc.duke.edu; FAX (919) 681-8463.

  • Article and publication are at www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.851000.

    • Received September 14, 2000.
    • Accepted October 3, 2000.
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