2003 Jun 20;5(16):1-21.

Author information

1
Department of Radiation Oncology, Radiation and Cancer Biology Division, Washington University School of Medicine, 4511 Forest Park, St Louis, MO 63108, USA. pandita@radonc.wustl.edu

Abstract

The pleiotropic nature of the clinical phenotypes of patients with ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T)--which encompass cerebellar degeneration (leading to ataxia), gonadal atrophy, and cancer predisposition--suggests multiple functions of the gene responsible for the disease. The ataxia-telangiectasia mutated gene product (ATM), whose loss of function is responsible for ataxia-telangiectasia, is a protein kinase that interacts with several substrates and is implicated in mitogenic signal transduction, chromosome condensation, meiotic recombination, cell-cycle control and telomere maintenance. This review focuses on the critical roles that ATM appears to play in cell-cycle checkpoints, DNA repair, telomere metabolism and oxidative stress, indicating how defects in these processes might lead to ataxia-telangiectasia.

PMID:
 
14987398
 
DOI:
 
doi:10.1017/S1462399403006318
[Indexed for MEDLINE]