Abstract

Ataxia telangiectasia (AT) is an autosomal recessive disease of childhood with several phenotypic characteristics. One of the hallmarks of this syndrome is its hypersensitivity to ionizing radiation, which is believed to be due to defects in DNA repair/processing. In addition to radio-resistant DNA synthesis, both fibroblasts and lymphoblastoid cell lines derived from these patients have been shown to have an impaired G 1 arrest and prolonged G 2 accumulation of cells indicating a defect in the regulation of cell cycle after irradiation. Since the (tumor suppressor) p53 protein has been reported to participate in the regulation of G 1 arrest after irradiation, the possibility of p53 gene mutation and deregulating cell cycle in AT needed to be examined. We used the PCR amplification and DNA sequencing methods to detect mutations in the hypermutable exons (5–8) of germline p53 in fibroblast cells from 3 AT homozygotes. No mutation was found in any of these exons. In order to determine the role of the p53 protein in G 1 arrest, its levels were measured before and after γ-irradiation by flow cytometry in both AT and normal cells. Radiation-induced p53 protein levels in the AT cells varied from 6 to 60% compared to the normal cells, indicating a reduced induction of the protein in AT. These results suggest that mutation in the AT gene affects the p53 induction by irradiation and may, thus, alter the cell cycle regulation in the AT patients.

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