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Dive into the research topics where Kum Kum Khanna is active.

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Featured researches published by Kum Kum Khanna.


Nature Genetics | 2001

DNA double-strand breaks: signaling, repair and the cancer connection

Kum Kum Khanna

To ensure the high-fidelity transmission of genetic information, cells have evolved mechanisms to monitor genome integrity. Cells respond to DNA damage by activating a complex DNA-damage-response pathway that includes cell-cycle arrest, the transcriptional and post-transcriptional activation of a subset of genes including those associated with DNA repair, and, under some circumstances, the triggering of programmed cell death. An inability to respond properly to, or to repair, DNA damage leads to genetic instability, which in turn may enhance the rate of cancer development. Indeed, it is becoming increasingly clear that deficiencies in DNA-damage signaling and repair pathways are fundamental to the etiology of most, if not all, human cancers. Here we describe recent progress in our understanding of how cells detect and signal the presence and repair of one particularly important form of DNA damage induced by ionizing radiation—the DNA double-strand break (DSB). Moreover, we discuss how tumor suppressor proteins such as p53, ATM, Brca1 and Brca2 have been linked to such pathways, and how accumulating evidence is connecting deficiencies in cellular responses to DNA DSBs with tumorigenesis.


Nature Genetics | 2000

ATM-dependent phosphorylation of nibrin in response to radiation exposure

Magtouf Gatei; David B. Young; Karen Cerosaletti; Ami Desai-Mehta; Kevin Spring; Sergei Kozlov; Martin F. Lavin; Richard A. Gatti; Patrick Concannon; Kum Kum Khanna

Mutations in the gene ATM are responsible for the genetic disorder ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T), which is characterized by cerebellar dysfunction, radiosensitivity, chromosomal instability and cancer predisposition. Both the A-T phenotype and the similarity of the ATM protein to other DNA-damage sensors suggests a role for ATM in biochemical pathways involved in the recognition, signalling and repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). There are strong parallels between the pattern of radiosensitivity, chromosomal instability and cancer predisposition in A-T patients and that in patients with Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS). The protein defective in NBS, nibrin (encoded by NBS1), forms a complex with MRE11 and RAD50 (refs 1,2). This complex localizes to DSBs within 30 minutes after cellular exposure to ionizing radiation (IR) and is observed in brightly staining nuclear foci after a longer period of time. The overlap between clinical and cellular phenotypes in A-T and NBS suggests that ATM and nibrin may function in the same biochemical pathway. Here we demonstrate that nibrin is phosphorylated within one hour of treatment of cells with IR. This response is abrogated in A-T cells that either do not express ATM protein or express near full-length mutant protein. We also show that ATM physically interacts with and phosphorylates nibrin on serine 343 both in vivo and in vitro. Phosphorylation of this site appears to be functionally important because mutated nibrin (S343A) does not completely complement radiosensitivity in NBS cells. ATM phosphorylation of nibrin does not affect nibrin-MRE11-RAD50 association as revealed by radiation-induced foci formation. Our data provide a biochemical explanation for the similarity in phenotype between A-T and NBS.


Nature Genetics | 1998

ATM associates with and phosphorylates p53: mapping the region of interaction

Kum Kum Khanna; Katherine Keating; Sergei Kozlov; Shaun P. Scott; Magtouf Gatei; Karen Hobson; Yoichi Taya; Brian Gabrielli; Doug W. Chan; Susan P. Lees-Miller; Martin F. Lavin

The human genetic disorder ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) is characterized by immunodeficiency, progressive cerebellar ataxia, radiosensitivity, cell cycle checkpoint defects and cancer predisposition. The gene mutated in this syndrome, ATM (for AT mutated), encodes a protein containing a phosphatidyl-inositol 3-kinase (PI-3 kinase)-like domain. ATM also contains a proline-rich region and a leucine zipper, both of which implicate this protein in signal transduction. The proline-rich region has been shown to bind to the SH3 domain of c-Abl, which facilitates its phosphorylation and activation by ATM (Refs 4,6). Previous results have demonstrated that AT cells are defective in the G1/S checkpoint activated after radiation damage and that this defect is attributable to a defective p53 signal transduction pathway. We report here direct interaction between ATM and p53 involving two regions in ATM, one at the amino terminus and the other at the carboxy terminus, corresponding to the PI-3 kinase domain. Recombinant ATM protein phosphorylates p53 on serine 15 near the N terminus. Furthermore, ectopic expression of ATM in AT cells restores normal ionizing radiation (IR)-induced phosphorylation of p53, whereas expression of ATM antisense RNA in control cells abrogates the rapid IR-induced phosphorylation of p53 on serine 15. These results demonstrate that ATM can bind p53 directly and is responsible for its serine 15 phosphorylation, thereby contributing to the activation and stabilization of p53 during the IR-induced DNA damage response.


Cancer Cell | 2003

Chk1 regulates the S phase checkpoint by coupling the physiological turnover and ionizing radiation-induced accelerated proteolysis of Cdc25A

Claus Storgaard Sørensen; Randi G. Syljuåsen; Jacob Falck; Tine Schroeder; Lars Rönnstrand; Kum Kum Khanna; Bin Bing Zhou; Jiri Bartek; Jiri Lukas

Chk1 kinase coordinates cell cycle progression and preserves genome integrity. Here, we show that chemical or genetic ablation of human Chk1 triggered supraphysiological accumulation of the S phase-promoting Cdc25A phosphatase, prevented ionizing radiation (IR)-induced degradation of Cdc25A, and caused radioresistant DNA synthesis (RDS). The basal turnover of Cdc25A operating in unperturbed S phase required Chk1-dependent phosphorylation of serines 123, 178, 278, and 292. IR-induced acceleration of Cdc25A proteolysis correlated with increased phosphate incorporation into these residues generated by a combined action of Chk1 and Chk2 kinases. Finally, phosphorylation of Chk1 by ATM was required to fully accelerate the IR-induced degradation of Cdc25A. Our results provide evidence that the mammalian S phase checkpoint functions via amplification of physiologically operating, Chk1-dependent mechanisms.


The EMBO Journal | 1996

DNA-DEPENDENT PROTEIN KINASE CATALYTIC SUBUNIT : A TARGET FOR AN ICE-LIKE PROTEASE IN APOPTOSIS

Q Song; Susan P. Lees-Miller; Sharad Kumar; Z Zhang; D W Chan; G C Smith; S P Jackson; Emad S. Alnemri; G Litwack; Kum Kum Khanna; Martin F. Lavin

Radiosensitive cell lines derived from X‐ray cross complementing group 5 (XRCC5), SCID mice and a human glioma cell line lack components of the DNA‐dependent protein kinase, DNA‐PK, suggesting that DNA‐PK plays an important role in DNA double‐strand break repair. Another enzyme implicated in DNA repair, poly(ADP‐ribose) polymerase, is cleaved and inactivated during apoptosis, suggesting that some DNA repair proteins may be selectively targeted for destruction during apoptosis. Here we demonstrate that DNA‐PKcs, the catalytic subunit of DNA‐PK, is preferentially degraded after the exposure of different cell types to a variety of agents known to cause apoptosis. However, Ku, the DNA‐binding component of the enzyme, remains intact. Degradation of DNA‐PKcs was accompanied by loss of DNA‐PK activity. One cell line resistant to etoposide‐induced apoptosis failed to show degradation of DNA‐PKcs. Protease inhibitor data implicated an ICE‐like protease in the cleavage of DNA‐PKcs, and it was subsequently shown that the cysteine protease CPP32, but not Mch2alpha, ICE or TX, cleaved purified DNA‐PKcs into three fragments of comparable size with those observed in cells undergoing apoptosis. Cleavage sites in DNA‐PKcs, determined by antibody mapping and microsequencing, were shown to be the same for CPP32 cleavage and for cleavage catalyzed by extracts from cells undergoing apoptosis. These observations suggest that DNA‐PKcs is a critical target for proteolysis by an ICE‐like protease during apoptosis.


The EMBO Journal | 2004

Autophosphorylation of ataxia‐telangiectasia mutated is regulated by protein phosphatase 2A

Aaron A. Goodarzi; Jyoti C Jonnalagadda; Pauline Douglas; David B. Young; Ruiqiong Ye; Greg B. G. Moorhead; Susan P. Lees-Miller; Kum Kum Khanna

Ionizing radiation induces autophosphorylation of the ataxia‐telangiectasia mutated (ATM) protein kinase on serine 1981; however, the precise mechanisms that regulate ATM activation are not fully understood. Here, we show that the protein phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid (OA) induces autophosphorylation of ATM on serine 1981 in unirradiated cells at concentrations that inhibit protein phosphatase 2A‐like activity in vitro. OA did not induce γ‐H2AX foci, suggesting that it induces ATM autophosphorylation by inactivation of a protein phosphatase rather than by inducing DNA double‐strand breaks. In support of this, we show that ATM interacts with the scaffolding (A) subunit of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), that the scaffolding and catalytic (C) subunits of PP2A interact with ATM in undamaged cells and that immunoprecipitates of ATM from undamaged cells contain PP2A‐like protein phosphatase activity. Moreover, we show that IR induces phosphorylation‐dependent dissociation of PP2A from ATM and loss of the associated protein phosphatase activity. We propose that PP2A plays an important role in the regulation of ATM autophosphorylation and activity in vivo.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2001

Chk2 Activation Dependence on Nbs1 after DNA Damage

Giacomo Buscemi; Camilla Savio; Laura Zannini; Francesca Miccichè; Debora Masnada; Makoto Nakanishi; Hiroshi Tauchi; Kenshi Komatsu; Shuki Mizutani; Kum Kum Khanna; Phil Chen; Patrick Concannon; Luciana Chessa; Domenico Delia

ABSTRACT The checkpoint kinase Chk2 has a key role in delaying cell cycle progression in response to DNA damage. Upon activation by low-dose ionizing radiation (IR), which occurs in an ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM)-dependent manner, Chk2 can phosphorylate the mitosis-inducing phosphatase Cdc25C on an inhibitory site, blocking entry into mitosis, and p53 on a regulatory site, causing G1 arrest. Here we show that the ATM-dependent activation of Chk2 by γ- radiation requires Nbs1, the gene product involved in the Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS), a disorder that shares with AT a variety of phenotypic defects including chromosome fragility, radiosensitivity, and radioresistant DNA synthesis. Thus, whereas in normal cells Chk2 undergoes a time-dependent increased phosphorylation and induction of catalytic activity against Cdc25C, in NBS cells null for Nbs1 protein, Chk2 phosphorylation and activation are both defective. Importantly, these defects in NBS cells can be complemented by reintroduction of wild-type Nbs1, but neither by a carboxy-terminal deletion mutant of Nbs1 at amino acid 590, unable to form a complex with and to transport Mre11 and Rad50 in the nucleus, nor by an Nbs1 mutated at Ser343 (S343A), the ATM phosphorylation site. Chk2 nuclear expression is unaffected in NBS cells, hence excluding a mislocalization as the cause of failed Chk2 activation in Nbs1-null cells. Interestingly, the impaired Chk2 function in NBS cells correlates with the inability, unlike normal cells, to stop entry into mitosis immediately after irradiation, a checkpoint abnormality that can be corrected by introduction of the wild-type but not the S343A mutant form of Nbs1. Altogether, these findings underscore the crucial role of a functional Nbs1 complex in Chk2 activation and suggest that checkpoint defects in NBS cells may result from the inability to activate Chk2.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Involvement of human MOF in ATM function

Arun Gupta; Girdhar G. Sharma; Charles S. H. Young; Manjula Agarwal; Edwin R. Smith; Tanya T. Paull; John C. Lucchesi; Kum Kum Khanna; Thomas Ludwig; Tej K. Pandita

ABSTRACT We have determined that hMOF, the human ortholog of the Drosophila MOF gene (males absent on the first), encoding a protein with histone acetyltransferase activity, interacts with the ATM (ataxia-telangiectasia-mutated) protein. Cellular exposure to ionizing radiation (IR) enhances hMOF-dependent acetylation of its target substrate, lysine 16 (K16) of histone H4 independently of ATM function. Blocking the IR-induced increase in acetylation of histone H4 at K16, either by the expression of a dominant negative mutant ΔhMOF or by RNA interference-mediated hMOF knockdown, resulted in decreased ATM autophosphorylation, ATM kinase activity, and the phosphorylation of downstream effectors of ATM and DNA repair while increasing cell killing. In addition, decreased hMOF activity was associated with loss of the cell cycle checkpoint response to DNA double-strand breaks. The overexpression of wild-type hMOF yielded the opposite results, i.e., a modest increase in cell survival and enhanced DNA repair after IR exposure. These results suggest that hMOF influences the function of ATM.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2001

ATM, a central controller of cellular responses to DNA damage.

Kum Kum Khanna; Martin F. Lavin; Terrence D. Mulhern

Mutations in the ATM gene lead to the genetic disorder ataxia-telangiectasia. ATM encodes a protein kinase that is mainly distributed in the nucleus of proliferating cells. Recent studies reveal that ATM regulates multiple cell cycle checkpoints by phosphorylating different targets at different stages of the cell cycle. ATM also functions in the regulation of DNA repair and apoptosis, suggesting that it is a central regulator of responses to DNA double-strand breaks. Cell Death and Differentiation (2001) 8, 1052–1065


Nature | 2008

Single-stranded DNA-binding protein hSSB1 is critical for genomic stability

Derek J. Richard; Emma Bolderson; Liza Cubeddu; Ross I. M. Wadsworth; Kienan Savage; Girdhar G. Sharma; Matthew L. Nicolette; Sergie Tsvetanov; Michael J. McIlwraith; Raj K. Pandita; Shunichi Takeda; Ronald T. Hay; Jean Gautier; Stephen C. West; Tanya T. Paull; Tej K. Pandita; Malcolm F. White; Kum Kum Khanna

Single-strand DNA (ssDNA)-binding proteins (SSBs) are ubiquitous and essential for a wide variety of DNA metabolic processes, including DNA replication, recombination, DNA damage detection and repair. SSBs have multiple roles in binding and sequestering ssDNA, detecting DNA damage, stimulating nucleases, helicases and strand-exchange proteins, activating transcription and mediating protein–protein interactions. In eukaryotes, the major SSB, replication protein A (RPA), is a heterotrimer. Here we describe a second human SSB (hSSB1), with a domain organization closer to the archaeal SSB than to RPA. Ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) kinase phosphorylates hSSB1 in response to DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). This phosphorylation event is required for DNA damage-induced stabilization of hSSB1. Upon induction of DNA damage, hSSB1 accumulates in the nucleus and forms distinct foci independent of cell-cycle phase. These foci co-localize with other known repair proteins. In contrast to RPA, hSSB1 does not localize to replication foci in S-phase cells and hSSB1 deficiency does not influence S-phase progression. Depletion of hSSB1 abrogates the cellular response to DSBs, including activation of ATM and phosphorylation of ATM targets after ionizing radiation. Cells deficient in hSSB1 exhibit increased radiosensitivity, defective checkpoint activation and enhanced genomic instability coupled with a diminished capacity for DNA repair. These findings establish that hSSB1 influences diverse endpoints in the cellular DNA damage response.

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Georgia Chenevix-Trench

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Fares Al-Ejeh

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Magtouf Gatei

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Derek J. Richard

Queensland University of Technology

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Murugan Kalimutho

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Emma Bolderson

Queensland University of Technology

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Wei Shi

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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