Christine Blattner
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Christine Blattner.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 1997
Klaus Bender; Christine Blattner; Axel Knebel; Mihail S. Iordanov; Peter Herrlich; Hans J. Rahmsdorf
Irradiation of cells with wavelength ultraviolet (UVA, B and C) induces the transcription of many genes. The program overlaps with that induced by oxidants and alkylating agents and has both protective and other functions. Genes transcribed in response to UV irradiation include genes encoding transcription factors, proteases and viral proteins. While the transcription factor encoding genes is initiated in minutes after UV irradiation (immediate response genes) and depends exclusively on performed proteins, the transcription of protease encoding occurs only many hours after UV irradiation. Transcription factors controlling the activity of immediate response genes are activated by protein kinases belonging to the group of proline directed protein kinases immediately after UV irradiation. Experimental evidence suggests that these kinases are activated in UV irradiated cells through pathways which are used by growth factors. In fact, the first cellular reaction detectable in UV irradiated cells is the phosphorylation of several growth factor receptors at tyrosine residues. This phosphorylation does not depend on UV induced DNA damage, but is due to an inhibition of the activity of tyrosine phosphatases. In contrast, for late cellular reactions to UV, an obligatory role of DNA damage in transcribed regions of the genome can be demonstrated. Thus, UV is absorbed by several target molecules relevant for cellular signaling, and it appears that numerous signal transduction pathways are stimulated. The combined action of these pathways establishes the genetic program that determines the fate of UV irradiated cells.
Oncogene | 1999
Christine Blattner; Edda Tobiasch; Margarethe Litfen; Hans J. Rahmsdorf; Peter Herrlich
Abundance and activity of p53 are predominantly regulated posttranslationally. Structural disturbance in transcribed genes induced by radiation, e.g. DNA damage, or by transcriptional inhibitors cause p53 protein stabilization by a yet unknown mechanism. Using stable and transient transfections for the analysis of p53 mutant proteins, we have ruled out a role in stabilization by UV, gamma irradiation or actinomycin C for the following putative phosphorylation sites in the p53 protein: serines 6, 9, 15, 33, 315 and 392, and threonine 18. By double mutation combinations of phosphorylations were also ruled out; 6,9; 15,18; 15,37. These mutations eliminate modifications by casein kinases I and II, DNA-PK, ATM, CDK and JNK. Also the 30 carboxyterminal amino acids are not required for induced p53 stabilization. Thus neither phosphorylations of individual amino acids nor interactions of the carboxyterminus of p53 with cellular macromolecules appear to play a role in the stabilization process. The only single prerequisite for induced stabilization of p53 is its prior destabilization by Mdm2. However, the level of active Mdm2 must be controlled carefully: overexpression of Mdm2 inhibits UV induced p53 stabilization.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002
Christine Blattner; T. Hay; David W. Meek; David P. Lane
ABSTRACT The Mdm2 protein mediates ubiquitylation and degradation of p53 and is a key regulator of this tumor suppressor. More recently, it has been shown that Mdm2 is highly phosphorylated within its central acidic domain. In order to address the issue of how these modifications might regulate Mdm2 function, putative phosphorylation sites within this domain were substituted, individually or in pairs, with alanine residues. Mutants with serine-to-alanine substitutions between residues 244 and 260 abolished or at least reduced the capacity of Mdm2 to promote p53 degradation. In each case, loss of degradation function was independent of the ability to bind to p53 or p14ARF. Moreover, each of the Mdm2 mutants completely retained the capacity to act as a ubiquitin ligase in vivo. Thus, ubiquitylation and degradation can be uncoupled. Two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping coupled with the use of phospho-specific antibodies revealed that Mdm2 is phosphorylated physiologically at several sites within this region, consistent with the idea that phosphorylation is important for Mdm2 activity. Strikingly, treatment of cells with ionizing radiation resulted in a significant decrease in the phosphorylation of residues that are important for p53 turnover. This hypophosphorylation preceded p53 accumulation. These findings indicate that Mdm2 contributes an additional function toward the degradation of p53 that is distinct from its ubiquitin ligase activity and is regulated by phosphorylation. Our model suggests that hypophosphorylation of Mdm2 in response to ionizing irradiation inactivates this novel function, thereby contributing to p53 stabilization.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Karen A. Boehme; R. Kulikov; Christine Blattner
The p53 protein is one of the major tumor suppressor proteins. In response to DNA damage, p53 is prevented from degradation and accumulates to high levels. Ionizing radiation leads to hypophosphorylation of the p53 ubiquitin ligase Mdm2 at sites where phosphorylation is critical for p53 degradation and to the phosphorylation and activation of Akt/PKB, a kinase that phosphorylates and inhibits GSK-3. GSK-3, which normally phosphorylates Mdm2, is inactivated in response to ionizing radiation. We show that p53 accumulates in lymphoblasts from patients with the hereditary disorder ataxia telangiectasia in response to ionizing radiation despite the absence of a functional ATM kinase. Also, knockdown of ATR did not prevent p53 accumulation in response to ionizing radiation. Instead, p53 stabilization in response to ionizing radiation depended on the inactivation of GSK-3 and the presence of Akt/PKB. Akt/PKB is a target of DNA-PK, a kinase that is activated after ionizing radiation. Correspondingly, down-regulation of DNA-PK prevented phosphorylation of Akt/PKB and GSK-3 after ionizing radiation and strongly reduced the accumulation of p53. We therefore propose a signaling cascade for the regulation of p53 in response to ionizing radiation that involves activation of DNA-PK and Akt/PKB and inactivation of GSK-3 and Mdm2.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005
R. Kulikov; Karen A. Boehme; Christine Blattner
ABSTRACT The Mdm2 oncoprotein regulates abundance and activity of the p53 tumor suppressor protein. For efficient degradation of p53, Mdm2 needs to be phosphorylated at several contiguous residues within the central conserved domain. We show that glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK-3) phosphorylated the Mdm2 protein in vitro and in vivo in the central domain. Inhibition of GSK-3 rescued p53 from degradation in an Mdm2-dependent manner while its association with Mdm2 was not affected. Likewise, inhibition of GSK-3 did not alter localization of p53 and Mdm2 or the interaction of Mdm2 and MdmX. Ionizing radiation, which leads to p53 accumulation, directed phosphorylation of GSK-3 at serine 9, which preceded and overlapped with the increase in p53 levels. Moreover, expression of a GSK-3 mutant where serine 9 was replaced with an alanine reduced the accumulation of p53 and induction of its target p21WAF-1. We therefore conclude that inhibition of GSK-3 contributes to hypophosphorylation of Mdm2 in response to ionizing rays, and in consequence to p53 stabilization.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000
Christine Blattner; Patricia Kannouche; Margarethe Litfin; Klaus Bender; Hans J. Rahmsdorf; Jaime F. Angulo; Peter Herrlich
ABSTRACT Irradiation of cells with short-wavelength ultraviolet light (UVC) changes the program of gene expression, in part within less than 15 min. As one of the immediate-early genes in response to UV, expression of the oncogene c-fos is upregulated. This immediate induction is regulated at the transcriptional level and is transient in character, due to the autocatalyzed shutoff of transcription and the rapid turnover of c-fos mRNA. In an experiment analyzing the kinetics of c-fos mRNA expression in murine fibroblasts irradiated with UVC, we found that, in addition to the initial transient induction, c-fos mRNA accumulated in a second wave starting at 4 to 5 h after irradiation, reaching a maximum at 8 h, and persisting for several more hours. It was accompanied by an increase in Fos protein synthesis. The second peak of c-fos RNA was caused by an UV dose-dependent increase in mRNA half-life from about 10 to 60 min. With similar kinetics, the mRNAs of other UV target genes (i.e., the Kin17 gene, c-jun, IκB, and c-myc) were stabilized (e.g., Kin17 RNA from 80 min to more than 8 h). The delayed response was not due to autocrine cytokine secretion with subsequent autostimulation of the secreting cells or to UV-induced growth factor receptor activation. Cells unable to repair UVC-induced DNA damage responded to lower doses of UVC with an even greater accumulation of c-fos and Kin17 mRNAs than repair-proficient wild-type cells, suggesting that a process in which a repair protein is involved regulates mRNA stability. Although resembling the induction of p53, a DNA damage-dependent increase in p53 was not a necessary intermediate in the stabilization reaction, since cells derived from p53 knockout mice showed the same pattern of c-fos and Kin17 mRNA accumulation as wild-type cells. The data indicate that the signal flow induced by UV radiation addresses not only protein stability (p53) and transcription but also RNA stability, a hitherto-unrecognized level of UV-induced regulation.
Molecular Cell | 2008
Frédéric Coin; Valentyn Oksenych; Vincent Mocquet; Stefanie Groh; Christine Blattner; Jean-Marc Egly
The transcription/DNA repair factor TFIIH is organized into a core that associates with the CDK-activating kinase (CAK) complex. Using chromatin immunoprecipitation, we have followed the composition of TFIIH over time after UV irradiation of repair-proficient or -deficient human cells. We show that TFIIH changes subunit composition in response to DNA damage. The CAK is released from the core during nucleotide excision repair (NER). Using reconstituted in vitro NER assay, we show that XPA catalyzes the detachment of the CAK from the core, together with the arrival of the other NER-specific factors. The release of the CAK from the core TFIIH promotes the incision/excision of the damaged oligonucleotide and thereby the repair of the DNA. Following repair, the CAK reappears with the core TFIIH on the chromatin, together with the resumption of transcription. Our findings demonstrate that the composition of TFIIH is dynamic to adapt its engagement in distinct cellular processes.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003
Sandra Glockzin; Francois-Xavier Ogi; Arnd Hengstermann; Martin Scheffner; Christine Blattner
ABSTRACT The stability of the tumor suppressor protein p53 is regulated via the ubiquitin-proteasome-dependent proteolytic pathway. Like most substrates of this pathway, p53 is modified by the attachment of polyubiquitin chains prior to proteasome-mediated degradation. However, the mechanism(s) involved in the delivery of polyubiquitylated p53 molecules to the proteasome are currently unclear. Here, we show that the human DNA repair protein hHR23 binds to polyubiquitylated p53 via its carboxyl-terminal ubiquitin-associated (Uba) domain shielding p53 from deubiquitylation in vitro and in vivo. In addition, downregulation of hHR23 expression within cells by RNA interference results in accumulation of p53. Since the Ubl domain of hHR23 has been shown to interact with the 26S proteasome, we propose that hHR23 is intrinsically involved in the delivery of polyubiquitylated p53 molecules to the proteasome. In this model, the Uba domain of hHR23 binds to polyubiquitin chains formed on p53 and protects them from deubiquitylation, while the Ubl domain delivers the polyubiquitylated p53 molecules to the proteasome.
Advances in Enzyme Regulation | 1994
Peter Herrlich; Christoph Sachsenmaier; Adriana Radler-Pohl; Stephan Gebel; Christine Blattner; Hans J. Rahmsdorf
DNA damage inducing treatment of cultured mammalian cells triggers the activation of transcription factors and the prolongation of the half life of p53. As the earliest event detectable in the nucleus (5 min), AP-1 (c-Jun/c-Fos) is post-translationally modified. Triggering this early event and triggering subsequent transcription factor dependent processes requires extra-nuclear components of signal transduction such as Src, Ras, Raf-1 and MAP-2 kinase. Recent efforts have concentrated on examining whether DNA damage or other secondary effects of the damaging agent generate the signal then passed on to transcription factors. Further, it has been studied whether a pathway of reverse signalling exists that originates in the nucleus and reaches the cell surface. At the cell surface the UV induced signalling chain can be interrupted experimentally. Beyond this step DNA damage and signal transduction induced by phorbol esters and growth factors merge and reach the nuclear proteins through common components.
Critical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2009
Karen A. Boehme; Christine Blattner
The p53 protein is one of the most important tumor suppressor proteins. Normally, the p53 protein is in a latent state. However, when its activity is required, e.g. upon DNA damage, nucleotide depletion or hypoxia, p53 becomes rapidly activated and initiates transcription of pro-apoptotic and cell cycle arrest-inducing target genes. The activity of p53 is regulated both by protein abundance and by post-translational modifications of pre-existing p53 molecules. In the 30 years of p53 research, a plethora of modifications and interaction partners that modulate p53’s abundance and activity have been identified and new ones are continuously discovered. This review will summarize our current knowledge on the regulation of p53 abundance and activity.