{Delta}Np73{beta} puts the brakes on DNA repair.

Genes Dev

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York 11724, USA.

Published: March 2010

Mammalian cells are barraged with endogenous metabolic byproducts and environmental insults that can lead to nearly a million genomic lesions per cell per day. Networks of proteins that repair these lesions are essential for genome maintenance, and a compromise in these pathways propagates mutations that can cause aging and cancer. The p53 tumor suppressor plays a central role in repairing the effects of DNA damage, and has therefore earned the title of "guardian of the genome." In this issue of Genes & Development, Wilhelm and colleagues (pp. 549-560) demonstrate that p73-an older sibling of p53-inhibits pathways that resolve DNA double-strand breaks.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2841329PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gad.1914210DOI Listing

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{Delta}Np73{beta} puts the brakes on DNA repair.

Genes Dev

March 2010

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York 11724, USA.

Mammalian cells are barraged with endogenous metabolic byproducts and environmental insults that can lead to nearly a million genomic lesions per cell per day. Networks of proteins that repair these lesions are essential for genome maintenance, and a compromise in these pathways propagates mutations that can cause aging and cancer. The p53 tumor suppressor plays a central role in repairing the effects of DNA damage, and has therefore earned the title of "guardian of the genome.

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