Authors
Leonard Wu, Sally L Davies, Phillip S North, Hélene Goulaouic, Jean-François Riou, Helen Turley, Kevin C Gatter, Ian D Hickson
Publication date
2000/3/31
Journal
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume
275
Issue
13
Pages
9636-9644
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Bloom's syndrome is a rare genetic disorder associated with loss of genomic integrity and a large increase in the incidence of many types of cancer at an early age. The Bloom's syndrome gene product, BLM, belongs to the RecQ family of DNA helicases, which also includes the human Werner's and Rothmund-Thomson syndrome gene products and the Sgs1 protein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This family shows strong evolutionary conservation of protein structure and function. Previous studies have shown that Sgs1p interacts both physically and genetically with topoisomerase III. Here, we have investigated whether this interaction has been conserved in human cells. We show that BLM and hTOPO IIIα, one of two human topoisomerase III homologues, co-localize in the nucleus of human cells and can be co-immunoprecipitated from human cell extracts. Moreover, the purified BLM and hTOPO IIIα proteins are …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
L Wu, SL Davies, PS North, H Goulaouic, JF Riou… - Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2000