Abstract
Phosphorylation of H2AX (γH2AX) is an early sign of DNA damage induced by replication stalling. However, the role of H2AX in the repair of this type of DNA damage is still unclear. In this study, we used an inactivated adeno-associated virus (AAV) to induce a stalled replication fork signal and investigate the function of γH2AX. The cellular response to AAV provides a unique model to study γH2AX function, because the infection causes pannuclear H2AX phosphorylation without any signs of damage to the host genome. We found that pannuclear γH2AX formation is a result of ATR overactivation and diffusion but is independent of ATM. The inhibition of H2AX with RNA interference or the use of H2AX-deficient cells showed that γH2AX is dispensable for the formation and maintenance of DNA repair foci induced by stalled replication. However, in the absence of H2AX, the AAV-containing cells showed proteosome-dependent degradation of p21, followed by caspase-dependent mitotic catastrophe. In contrast, H2AX-proficient cells as well as H2AX-complemented H2AX−/− cells reacted by increasing p21 levels and arresting the cell cycle. The results establish a new role for H2AX in the p53/p21 pathway and indicate that H2AX is required for p21-induced cell cycle arrest after replication stalling.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://mcb.asm.org/ .
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Evi Soutoglou, Tony Carr, Andre Nussenzweig, Thomas Melendy, Nicolai Tomilin, Nicole Paduwat, and Maria Choleza for help and materials.
This work was supported by Recherche Suisse contre le Cancer and the Fonds National Suisse de la Recherche Scientifique.