14 research outputs found
hSSB1 phosphorylation is dynamically regulated by DNA-PK and PPP-family protein phosphatases
This work was supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council project grant [1066550], an Australian Research Council project grant [DP 120103099] and by a Queensland Health Senior Clinical Research Fellowship awarded to K.J.O. This work was also supported by the Wellcome Trust [094476/Z/10/Z], which funded the purchase of the TripleTOF 5600 mass spectrometer at the BSRC Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics Facility, University of St Andrews. NWA was supported by a scholarship awarded by Cancer Council Queensland. E.B. is supported by an Advance Queensland Research Fellowship.The maintenance of genomic stability is essential for cellular viability and the prevention of diseases such as cancer. Human single-stranded DNA-binding protein 1 (hSSB1) is a protein with roles in the stabilisation and restart of stalled DNA replication forks, as well as in the repair of oxidative DNA lesions and double-strand DNA breaks. In the latter process, phosphorylation of threonine 117 by the ATM kinase is required for hSSB1 stability and efficient DNA repair. The regulation of hSSB1 in other DNA repair pathways has however remained unclear. Here we report that hSSB1 is also directly phosphorylated by DNA-PK at serine residue 134. While this modification is largely suppressed in undamaged cells by PPP-family protein phosphatases, S134 phosphorylation is enhanced following the disruption of replication forks and promotes cellular survival. Together, these data thereby represent a novel mechanism for hSSB1 regulation following the inhibition of replication.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Comparison of Gluten Extraction Protocols Assessed by LC-MS/MS Analysis
The efficiency of gluten extraction
is of critical importance to the results derived from any analytical
method for gluten detection and quantitation, whether it employs reagent-based
technology (antibodies) or analytical instrumentation (mass spectrometry).
If the target proteins are not efficiently extracted, the end result
will be an under-estimation in the gluten content posing a health
risk to people affected by conditions such as celiac disease (CD)
and nonceliac gluten sensitivity (NCGS). Five different extraction
protocols were investigated using LC-MRM-MS for their ability to efficiently
and reproducibly extract gluten. The rapid and simple “IPA/DTT”
protocol and related “two-step” protocol were enriched
for gluten proteins, 55/86% (trypsin/chymotrypsin) and 41/68% of all
protein identifications, respectively, with both methods showing high
reproducibility (CV < 15%). When using multistep protocols, it
was critical to examine all fractions, as coextraction of proteins
occurred across fractions, with significant levels of proteins existing
in unexpected fractions and not all proteins within a particular gluten
class behaving the same
hSSB1 phosphorylation is dynamically regulated by DNA-PK and PPP-family protein phosphatases
The maintenance of genomic stability is essential for cellular viability and the prevention of diseases such as cancer. Human single-stranded DNA-binding protein 1 (hSSB1) is a protein with roles in the stabilisation and restart of stalled DNA replication forks, as well as in the repair of oxidative DNA lesions and double-strand DNA breaks. In the latter process, phosphorylation of threonine 117 by the ATM kinase is required for hSSB1 stability and efficient DNA repair. The regulation of hSSB1 in other DNA repair pathways has however remained unclear. Here we report that hSSB1 is also directly phosphorylated by DNA-PK at serine residue 134. While this modification is largely suppressed in undamaged cells by PPP-family protein phosphatases, S134 phosphorylation is enhanced following the disruption of replication forks and promotes cellular survival. Together, these data thereby represent a novel mechanism for hSSB1 regulation following the inhibition of replication