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Dataset for: The role of PCNA as a scaffold protein in cellular signaling is functionally conserved between yeast and humans

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posted on 2018-06-21, 11:45 authored by Camilla Olaisen, Hans Fredrik Kvitvang, Sungmin Lee, Eivind Almaas, Per Bruheim, Finn Drabløs, Marit Otterlei
Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), a member of the highly conserved DNA sliding clamp family, is an essential protein for cellular processes including DNA replication and repair. A large number of proteins from higher eukaryotes contain one of two PCNA-interacting motifs: PIP-box (PCNA interacting protein-box) and APIM (AlkB homologue 2 PCNA-interacting motif). APIM has been shown to be especially important during cellular stress. PIP-box is known to be functionally conserved in yeast, and here we show that this is also the case for APIM. Several of the 84 APIM-containing yeast proteins are associated with cellular signaling as hub-proteins, which are able to interact with a large number of other proteins. Cellular signaling is highly conserved throughout evolution, and we recently suggested a novel role for PCNA as a scaffold protein in cellular signaling in human cells. A cell-penetrating peptide containing the APIM sequence increases the sensitivity towards the chemotherapeutic agent cisplatin in both yeast and human cells, and both yeast and human cells become hypersensitive when the Hog1/p38 MAPK pathway is blocked. These results suggest that the interactions between APIM-containing signaling proteins and PCNA during the DNA damage response is evolutionary conserved between yeast and mammals, and that PCNA has a role in cellular signaling also in yeast.

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