Experimental design, validation and computational modeling uncover DNA damage sensing by DNA-PK and ATM

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Abstract

Reliable and efficient detection of DNA damage constitutes a vital capability of human cells to maintain genome stability. Following DNA damage, the histone variant H2AX becomes rapidly phosphorylated by the DNA damage response kinases DNA-PKcs and ATM. H2AX phosphorylation plays a central role in signal amplification leading to chromatin remodeling and DNA repair initiation. The contribution of DNA-PKcs and ATM to H2AX phosphorylation is however puzzling. Although ATM is required, DNA-PK cs can substitute for it. Here we analyze the interplay between DNA-PKcs and ATM with a computational model derived by an iterative workflow: switching between experimental design, experiment and model analysis, we generated an extensive set of time-resolved data and identified a conclusive dynamic signaling model out of several alternatives. Our work shows that DNA-PKcs and ATM enforce a biphasic H2AX phosphorylation. DNA-PK cs can be associated to the initial, and ATM to the succeeding phosphorylation phase of H2AX resulting into a signal persistence detection function for reliable damage sensing. Further, our model predictions emphasize that DNA-PKcs inhibition significantly delays H2AX phosphorylation and associated DNA repair initiation. This journal is © the Partner Organisations 2014.

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Flassig, R. J., Maubach, G., Täger, C., Sundmacher, K., & Naumann, M. (2014). Experimental design, validation and computational modeling uncover DNA damage sensing by DNA-PK and ATM. Molecular BioSystems, 10(7), 1978–1986. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4mb00093e

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