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Mol. Cells 2005; 20(2): 228-234

Published online January 1, 1970

© The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology

Deficiency of Bloom’s Syndrome Protein Causes Hypersensitivity of C. elegans to Ionizing Radiation but Not to UV Radiation, and Induces p53-dependent Physiological Apoptosis

Yun Mi Kim, Insil Yang, Jiyeung Lee, Hyeon-Sook Koo

Abstract

Caenorhabditis elegans him-6 mutants, which show a high incidence of males and partial embryonic lethality, are defective in the orthologue of human Bloom’s syndrome protein (BLM). When strain him-6(e1104) containing a missense him-6 mutation was irradiated with g-rays during germ cell development or embryogenesis, embryonic lethality was higher than in the wild type, suggesting a critical function of the wild type gene in mitotic and pachytene stage germ cells as well as in early embryos. Even in the absence of g-irradiation, apoptosis was elevated in the germ cells of the him-6 strain and this increase was dependent on a functional p53 homologue (CEP-1), suggesting that spontaneous DNA damage accumulates due to him-6 deficiency. However, induction of germline apoptosis by ionizing radiation was not significantly affected by the deficiency, indicating that HIM-6 has no role in the induction of apoptosis by exogenous DNA damage. We conclude that the C. elegans BLM orthologue is involved in DNA repair in promeiotic cells undergoing homologous recombination, as well as in actively dividing germline and somatic cells.

Keywords Apoptosis; DNA Damage; him-6; RecQ

Article

Research Article

Mol. Cells 2005; 20(2): 228-234

Published online October 31, 2005

Copyright © The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology.

Deficiency of Bloom’s Syndrome Protein Causes Hypersensitivity of C. elegans to Ionizing Radiation but Not to UV Radiation, and Induces p53-dependent Physiological Apoptosis

Yun Mi Kim, Insil Yang, Jiyeung Lee, Hyeon-Sook Koo

Abstract

Caenorhabditis elegans him-6 mutants, which show a high incidence of males and partial embryonic lethality, are defective in the orthologue of human Bloom’s syndrome protein (BLM). When strain him-6(e1104) containing a missense him-6 mutation was irradiated with g-rays during germ cell development or embryogenesis, embryonic lethality was higher than in the wild type, suggesting a critical function of the wild type gene in mitotic and pachytene stage germ cells as well as in early embryos. Even in the absence of g-irradiation, apoptosis was elevated in the germ cells of the him-6 strain and this increase was dependent on a functional p53 homologue (CEP-1), suggesting that spontaneous DNA damage accumulates due to him-6 deficiency. However, induction of germline apoptosis by ionizing radiation was not significantly affected by the deficiency, indicating that HIM-6 has no role in the induction of apoptosis by exogenous DNA damage. We conclude that the C. elegans BLM orthologue is involved in DNA repair in promeiotic cells undergoing homologous recombination, as well as in actively dividing germline and somatic cells.

Keywords: Apoptosis, DNA Damage, him-6, RecQ

Mol. Cells
Nov 30, 2023 Vol.46 No.11, pp. 655~725
COVER PICTURE
Kim et al. (pp. 710-724) demonstrated that a pathogen-derived Ralstonia pseudosolanacearum type III effector RipL delays flowering time and enhances susceptibility to bacterial infection in Arabidopsis thaliana. Shown is the RipL-expressing Arabidopsis plant, which displays general dampening of the transcriptional program during pathogen infection, grown in long-day conditions.

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Molecules and Cells

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