Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Molecular Biology Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Chemicals and Drugs

University of Kentucky

Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry Faculty Publications

H1.2 polyubiquitination

Articles 1 - 1 of 1

Full-Text Articles in Molecular Biology

Itch Nuclear Translocation And H1.2 Polyubiquitination Negatively Regulate The Dna Damage Response, Lufen Chang, Lei Shen, Hu Zhou, Jing Gao, Hangyi Pan, Li Zheng, Brian Armstrong, Yang Peng, Guang Peng, Binhua P. Zhou, Steven T. Rosen, Binghui Shen Jan 2019

Itch Nuclear Translocation And H1.2 Polyubiquitination Negatively Regulate The Dna Damage Response, Lufen Chang, Lei Shen, Hu Zhou, Jing Gao, Hangyi Pan, Li Zheng, Brian Armstrong, Yang Peng, Guang Peng, Binhua P. Zhou, Steven T. Rosen, Binghui Shen

Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry Faculty Publications

The downregulation of the DNA damage response (DDR) enables aggressive tumors to achieve uncontrolled proliferation against replication stress, but the mechanisms underlying this process in tumors are relatively complex. Here, we demonstrate a mechanism through which a distinct E3 ubiquitin ligase, ITCH, modulates DDR machinery in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). We found that expression of a nuclear form of ITCH was significantly increased in human TNBC cell lines and tumor specimens. Phosphorylation of ITCH at Ser257 by AKT led to the nuclear localization of ITCH and ubiquitination of H1.2. The ITCH-mediated polyubiquitination of H1.2 suppressed RNF8/RNF168-dependent formation of 53BP1 foci, …