DNA damage stabilizes interaction of CSB with the transcription elongation machinery
Open Access
- 28 June 2004
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 166 (1), 27-36
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200401056
Abstract
The Cockayne syndrome B (CSB) protein is essential for transcription-coupled DNA repair (TCR), which is dependent on RNA polymerase II elongation. TCR is required to quickly remove the cytotoxic transcription-blocking DNA lesions. Functional GFP-tagged CSB, expressed at physiological levels, was homogeneously dispersed throughout the nucleoplasm in addition to bright nuclear foci and nucleolar accumulation. Photobleaching studies showed that GFP-CSB, as part of a high molecular weight complex, transiently interacts with the transcription machinery. Upon (DNA damage-induced) transcription arrest CSB binding these interactions are prolonged, most likely reflecting actual engagement of CSB in TCR. These findings are consistent with a model in which CSB monitors progression of transcription by regularly probing elongation complexes and becomes more tightly associated to these complexes when TCR is active.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- The androgen receptor ligand-binding domain stabilizes DNA binding in living cellsJournal of Structural Biology, 2004
- The transcription cycle of RNA polymerase II in living cellsThe Journal of cell biology, 2002
- A Rad26–Def1 complex coordinates repair and RNA pol II proteolysis in response to DNA damageNature, 2002
- Requirement for Yeast RAD26, a Homolog of the HumanCSB Gene, in Elongation by RNA Polymerase IIMolecular and Cellular Biology, 2001
- Sequential Assembly of the Nucleotide Excision Repair Factors In VivoMolecular Cell, 2001
- RETRACTED: Transcription-Coupled Repair of 8-oxoGuanine: Requirement for XPG, TFIIH, and CSB and Implications for Cockayne SyndromeCell, 2000
- The Glucocorticoid Receptor: Rapid Exchange with Regulatory Sites in Living CellsScience, 2000
- Action of DNA Repair Endonuclease ERCC1/XPF in Living CellsScience, 1999
- The ancient regulatory-protein family of WD-repeat proteinsNature, 1994
- Crystal structure of the 2:1 complex between d(GAAGCTTC) and the anticancer drug actinomycin DJournal of Molecular Biology, 1992