Detection of functional single-nucleotide polymorphisms that affect apoptosis

Authors:
Harris SL, Gil G, Robins H, Hu W, Hirshfield K, Bond E, Bond G and Levine AJ
In:
Source: Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
Publication Date: (2005)
Issue: 102(45): 16297-16302
Research Area:
Cancer Research/Cell Biology
Cells used in publication:
LCL
Species: human
Tissue Origin: blood
Platform:
Nucleofector® I/II/2b
Abstract
Human EBV-transformed B lymphocyte cell lines (LCLs) were used to measure the apoptotic response of individuals to gamma radiation. The responses form a normal distribution around a median of 35.5% apoptosis with a range of 12-58%. This heterogeneous response has a genetic basis. LCLs from Caucasian donors and African American donors form distinct distributions of apoptotic response; all of the 11 LCLs comprising the lowest responding group (exhibiting between 12-20% apoptosis) are from Caucasian donors. The assay is capable of detecting significant effects of SNPs in two genes, MDM2 and AKT1, whose products are involved in controlling the p53 pathway and cellular response to DNA damage, suggesting that these data and this assay can be used to identify novel SNPs in other genes whose products impact the cellular response to radiation. Finally, the LCLs in the lowest apoptotic response group have the highest concentration of AKT1 protein and all harbor a haplotype in AKT1 that is present in Caucasians but absent in African Americans.