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The role of truncated PPM1D/Wip1 phosphatase in cancer
Martiníková, Andra-Stefania ; Macůrek, Libor (advisor) ; Souček, Pavel (referee) ; Mistrík, Martin (referee)
When encountering damage, the cells activate the DNA Damage Response (DDR) pathway and stop the cell cycle until the DNA is repaired. PPM1D/WIP1 phosphatase resumes the cell cycle after the damage has been repaired, by directly dephosphorylating DNA damage markers. The DDR pathway prevents genome instability or cancer development. Mutations in the Ppm1d gene encoding PPM1D result in an overstable and truncated protein observed both in cancer patients and in cancer cell lines. In this thesis, we used an "in-house" transgenic mouse model in which mutations in the exon 6 of the Ppm1d gene resulted in a truncated PPM1D protein. First, we observed high PPM1D levels and impaired DDR to gamma ionizing radiation (IR) in the mouse thymi having truncated PPM1D (Ppm1dT/+ ). We then bred the Ppm1dT/+ mice with the Trp53+/- heterozygote knock-out mice which are prone to thymic lymphoma. The Ppm1dT/+ Trp53+/- double-mutants had a higher frequency of developing IR-induced T-cell lymphomas, compared to the single Trp53+/- mutants. Moreover, truncated PPM1D leads to a defective cell cycle checkpoint activation in human non-transformed RPE cells (RPE1), which then proliferate despite the presence of DNA damage. RPE1 cells also display increased proliferation after replication stress. RPE1 or U2OS cells with...

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