A Ku80 fragment with dominant negative activity imparts a radiosensitive phenotype to CHO-K1 cells

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Abstract

DNA non-homologous end joining, the major mechanism for the repair of DNA double-strands breaks (DSB) in mammalian cells requires the DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), a complex composed of a large catalytic subunit of 460 kDa (DNA-PKcs) and the heterodimer Ku70-Ku80 that binds to double-stranded DNA-ends. Mutations in any of the three subunits of DNA-PK lead to extreme radiosensitivity and DSB repair deficiency. Here we show that the 283 C-terminal amino acids of Ku80 introduced into the Chinese hamster ovary cell line CHO-K1 have a dominant negative effect. Expression of Ku(449-732) in CHO cells was verified by northern blot analysis and resulted in decreased Ku-dependent DNA end-binding activity, a diminished capacity to repair DSBs as determined by pulsed field gel electrophoresis and decreased radioresistance determined by clonogenic survival. The stable modifications observed at the molecular and cellular level suggest that this fragment of Ku80 confers a dominant negative effect providing an important mechanism to sensitise radioresistant cells.

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Marangoni, E., Foray, N., O’Driscoll, M., Douc-Rasy, S., Bernier, J., Bourhis, J., & Jeggo, P. (2000). A Ku80 fragment with dominant negative activity imparts a radiosensitive phenotype to CHO-K1 cells. Nucleic Acids Research, 28(23), 4778–4782. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/28.23.4778

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