Developmentally Regulated Elimination of Damaged Nuclei Involves a Chk2-Dependent Mechanism of mRNA Nuclear Retention
pmid: 24835465
Developmentally Regulated Elimination of Damaged Nuclei Involves a Chk2-Dependent Mechanism of mRNA Nuclear Retention
The faithful execution of embryogenesis relies on the ability of organisms to respond to genotoxic stress and to eliminate defective cells that could otherwise compromise viability. In syncytial-stage Drosophila embryos, nuclei with excessive DNA damage undergo programmed elimination through an as-yet poorly understood process of nuclear fallout at the midblastula transition. We show that this involves a Chk2-dependent mechanism of mRNA nuclear retention that is induced by DNA damage and prevents the translation of specific zygotic mRNAs encoding key mitotic, cytoskeletal, and nuclear proteins required to maintain nuclear viability. For histone messages, we show that nuclear retention involves Chk2-mediated inactivation of the Drosophila stem loop binding protein (SLBP), the levels of which are specifically depleted in damaged nuclei following Chk2 phosphorylation, an event that contributes to nuclear fallout. These results reveal a layer of regulation within the DNA damage surveillance systems that safeguard genome integrity in eukaryotes.
- University of Toronto Canada
- McGill University Canada
- University of Montreal Canada
- Montreal Clinical Research Institute Canada
Cell Nucleus, Embryo, Nonmammalian, DNA Repair, RNA-Binding Proteins, Blastula, Animals, Genetically Modified, Histones, Checkpoint Kinase 2, Drosophila melanogaster, Animals, Drosophila Proteins, RNA, Messenger, Phosphorylation, Developmental Biology, DNA Damage
Cell Nucleus, Embryo, Nonmammalian, DNA Repair, RNA-Binding Proteins, Blastula, Animals, Genetically Modified, Histones, Checkpoint Kinase 2, Drosophila melanogaster, Animals, Drosophila Proteins, RNA, Messenger, Phosphorylation, Developmental Biology, DNA Damage
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