ATM (Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated) Antibodies from Imgenex
- By Stephen Jones
- Published 01/27/2008
- Medicine
- Unrated
ATM, the gene product mutated in
the cancer susceptibility syndrome ataxia–telangiectasia, is related to
proteins involved in DNA repair and cell-cycle control. It encodes a nuclear
350 kDa phosphoprotein containing a carboxy terminus phosphatidylinositol
3-kinase (Pl-3 kinase) catalytic domain shared by members of a superfamily of
large eukaryotic proteins involved in intracellular signaling, DNA-damage
induced cell cycle checkpoints, DNA repair and recombination. It was discovered
as mutated proteins in patients with ataxia-telagiectasia (A-T), a severe
genetic disorder characterized by cerebellar degeneration, neuromotor
dysfunction, chromosomal instability, immune system defects, cancer
predisposition, and acute sensitivity to ionizing radiations. In undamaged
cells it is present as a dimer or oligomer molecule in which the kinase domain
is silent because associated with the FAT region of another ATM monomer.
Following DSB formation, it rapidly autophosphorylates on residue Serine 1981,
and the inactive ATM dimers are converted (dissociated) into active ATM
monomers. Active phosphorylated ATM molecules interact and phosphorylate
downstream proteins that affect one or more of the cell cycle checkpoints. Some
of the known substrates are the p53 protein and its ubiquitin ligase, MDM2; the
Nbs1 protein; the Brca1 protein, which interacts with other repair proteins;
the checkpoint kinase 2, Chk2; the Rad17 protein and the chromatin remodeling
protein SMC1. Phylogenetic analyses reveal that the ATM protein is most closely
related to several very large proteins that define a subgroup of the PI
3-kinase family which include the Schizosaccharomyces
pombe Rad3 protein and its probable Saccharomyces
cerevisiae homologue, Mec1p/Esr1p. Other proteins in the ATM family are S. cerevisia
Keywords: ATM, DNA , phosphorylate
Author Information
IMGENEX India Pvt Ltd. the only
biotech company in Orissa and one of its kinds in

