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14-3-3σ Protein in DNA Damage-Induced Checkpoints

14-3-3 protein is a member of a large family of highly conserved proteins involved in apoptosis, cell cycle progression and checkpoint activation. 14-3-3σ, the family member most directly linked to cancer, is induced by DNA damage and is required for a stable G2 cell cycle arrest.

DNA damage-induced 14-3-3σ Signaling

Pathway Summary

The 14-3-3 proteins comprise a large family of highly conserved, small, acidic polypeptides that are found in all eukaryotic species and play important roles in a wide range of cellular processes including signal transduction, apoptosis, cell cycle progression and checkpoint activation. In humans, seven different genes encode the highly conserved 14-3-3 isotypes (α, β, γ, δ, ε, η, σ, τ, and ζ). The 14-3-3 proteins regulate numerous cellular signaling circuits that are implicated in cancer development. They bind to protein ligands following their serine/threonine phosphorylation at a defined motif and regulate their activities by different mechanisms. These include inter- and intra-compartmental sequestration, activation/inactivation of enzymatic activity and promotion/inhibition of protein interactions.14-3-3 proteins play a critical role in DNA damage-induced checkpoints by controlling the biological activity of several key cell cycle checkpoint proteins through binding to phosphorylated serine residues. In normal cells, DNA damage leads to activation of cell cycle checkpoints and arrest in the G1 and G2 phases of the cell cycle. Of all the 14-3-3 family members, 14-3-3σ has been most directly linked to cancer. It functions as a tumor suppressor by inhibiting cell cycle progression and by causing cells to leave the stem-cell phenotype and undergo differentiation. 14-3-3σ is induced by DNA damage and is required for a stable G2 cell cycle arrest in epithelial cells. DNA damage generates a 14-3-3-binding motif in the carboxyl terminus of the tumor suppressor protein p53. The subsequent association of p53 with 14-3-3 proteins leads to an increase in its DNA-binding activity, which has a direct effect on cell cycle progression as it affects the localization of CDK2 and CDC2. 14-3-3σ normally sequesters cyclin B, cyclin E and CDC2 in the cytoplasm, keeping CDC2-cyclin B and CDK2-cyclin E complexes from entering the nucleus and initiating mitosis. Loss of the ability to bind 14-3-3 proteins leads to a strongly reduced ability of p53 to induce genes that mediate cell cycle arrest after DNA damage.In addition to regulating kinases after activation of DNA-damage checkpoints, 14-3-3 proteins regulate the activity of transcription factors that induce negative regulators of the cell cycle machinery. 14-3-3σ is also induced by BRCA1 and is thereby part of the concerted activation of regulators that is mediated through BRCA1 after induction of DNA damage induced kinases ATM/ATR and the checkpoint proteins Rad1, Rad9 and Hus1 which act as DNA-damage detectors. 14-3-3σ expression is restricted to epithelial cells and increases during epithelial differentiation. 14-3-3σ is silenced by CpG methylation in a large proportion of carcinomas, which can be used for diagnosis. Inactivation of 14-3-3σ leads to immortalization of primary keratinocytes and prevents exit from the stem cell phenotype. Loss of 14-3-3σ expression sensitizes tumor cells to treatment with conventional cytostatic drugs. Modulation of 14-3-3σ activities might therefore be an attractive therapeutic approach for the treatment of lung cancer, especially in combination with radiotherapy.

DNA damage-induced 14-3-3σ Signaling Genes list

Explore Genes related to DNA damage-induced 14-3-3σ Signaling
AKT1
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Human
AKT serine/threonine kinase 1
AKT2
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Human
AKT serine/threonine kinase 2
AKT3
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Human
AKT serine/threonine kinase 3
APAF1
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Human
apoptotic peptidase activating factor 1
ATM
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Human
ATM serine/threonine kinase
ATR
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Human
ATR serine/threonine kinase
BAD
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Human
BCL2 associated agonist of cell death
BCL2
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Human
BCL2 apoptosis regulator
BCL2L1
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Human
BCL2 like 1
BRCA1
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Human
BRCA1 DNA repair associated
CARD9
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Human
caspase recruitment domain family member 9
CASP1
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Human
caspase 1
CASP10
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Human
caspase 10
CASP12
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Human
caspase 12 (gene/pseudogene)
CASP14
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Human
caspase 14
CASP2
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Human
caspase 2
CASP3
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Human
caspase 3
CASP4
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Human
caspase 4
CASP5
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Human
caspase 5
CASP6
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Human
caspase 6
CASP7
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Human
caspase 7
CASP8
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Human
caspase 8
CASP9
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Human
caspase 9
CASQ1
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Human
calsequestrin 1
CCNB1
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Human
cyclin B1
CCNB2
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Human
cyclin B2
CCNB3
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Human
cyclin B3
CCNE1
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Human
cyclin E1
CCNE2
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Human
cyclin E2
CDC25C
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Human
cell division cycle 25C
CDK1
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Human
cyclin dependent kinase 1
CDK2
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Human
cyclin dependent kinase 2
CDKN1A
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Human
cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 1A
CDKN1B
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Human
cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 1B
CHEK1
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Human
checkpoint kinase 1
CHEK2
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Human
checkpoint kinase 2
COP1
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Human
COP1 E3 ubiquitin ligase
E2F1
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Human
E2F transcription factor 1
HUS1
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Human
HUS1 checkpoint clamp component
MDM2
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Human
MDM2 proto-oncogene
RAD1
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Human
RAD1 checkpoint DNA exonuclease
RAD17
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Human
RAD17 checkpoint clamp loader component
RAD9A
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Human
RAD9 checkpoint clamp component A
SFN
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Human
stratifin
TP53
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Human
tumor protein p53
WEE1
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Human
WEE1 G2 checkpoint kinase

Products related to DNA damage-induced 14-3-3σ Signaling

Explore products related to DNA damage-induced 14-3-3σ Signaling
QuantiNova LNA Probe PCR Focus Panel Human DNA Repair
GeneGlobe ID: UPHS-042Z | Cat. No.: 249955 | QuantiNova LNA Probe PCR Focus Panels
QuantiNova LNA Probe PCR Focus Panel
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QuantiNova LNA Probe PCR Focus Panel Human DNA Damage Signaling Pathway
GeneGlobe ID: UPHS-029Z | Cat. No.: 249955 | QuantiNova LNA Probe PCR Focus Panels
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QuantiNova LNA PCR Focus Panel Human DNA Damage Signaling Pathway
GeneGlobe ID: SBHS-029Z | Cat. No.: 249950 | QuantiNova LNA PCR Focus Panels
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RT² Profiler™ PCR Array Human DNA Repair
GeneGlobe ID: PAHS-042Z | Cat. No.: 330231 | RT2 Profiler PCR Arrays
RT2 Profiler PCR Array
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QuantiNova LNA PCR Focus Panel Human DNA Repair
GeneGlobe ID: SBHS-042Z | Cat. No.: 249950 | QuantiNova LNA PCR Focus Panels
QuantiNova LNA PCR Focus Panel
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RT² Profiler™ PCR Array Human DNA Damage Signaling Pathway
GeneGlobe ID: PAHS-029Z | Cat. No.: 330231 | RT2 Profiler PCR Arrays
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Overview of 14-3-3σ signaling

14-3-3σ is a specialized isoform of the 14-3-3 protein family that plays a distinct and critical role in the cellular response to DNA damage, particularly in enforcing G2/M checkpoint arrest. Unlike other 14-3-3 proteins, which are broadly expressed across tissues, 14-3-3σ is predominantly found in epithelial cells and is tightly regulated by the tumor suppressor p53.

In response to DNA damage, 14-3-3σ binds to proteins containing phosphorylated serine or threonine motifs, acting as a molecular scaffold to modulate their localization and activity. One of its key functions is to sequester the phosphatase CDC25C in the cytoplasm, preventing activation of the CDK1/Cyclin B complex and thereby halting mitotic entry until DNA repair is complete. Through these interactions, 14-3-3σ serves as a crucial effector in the G2/M DNA damage checkpoint pathway, maintaining genomic integrity and acting as a barrier to tumorigenesis.

14-3-3σ protein in DNA damage-induced cell cycle arrest

14-3-3σ plays a pivotal role in enforcing G2/M cell cycle arrest following DNA damage, acting as a downstream effector of the p53 tumor suppressor pathway. Upon detection of DNA damage, sensor kinases ATM and ATR are activated and initiate a signaling cascade that stabilizes and activates p53. Activated p53 functions as a transcription factor and induces the expression of several genes involved in cell cycle regulation, including 14-3-3σ.

In parallel, ATM/ATR signaling also activates the checkpoint kinases CHK1 and CHK2, which phosphorylate the phosphatase CDC25C on specific serine residues. This phosphorylation serves as a recognition motif for 14-3-3σ, which binds to CDC25C. 14-3-3σ binding sequesters CDC25C in the cytoplasm, preventing it from entering the nucleus where it would normally dephosphorylate and activate CDK1/Cyclin B, the complex responsible for initiating mitosis.

By preventing CDC25C-mediated activation of CDK1/Cyclin B, 14-3-3σ effectively halts the cell cycle at the G2/M transition, allowing the cell time to repair DNA damage before proceeding to mitosis. This mechanism is critical for maintaining genomic stability and preventing the propagation of damaged DNA, and its disruption has been implicated in tumorigenesis.

Biological consequences of 14-3-3σ protein disruption

Disruption of 14-3-3σ signaling has significant biological consequences, mirroring many of the effects seen with general G2/M checkpoint failure, including premature mitotic entry, accumulation of DNA damage and increased genomic instability. However, 14-3-3σ holds particular importance as a tissue-specific tumor suppressor, especially in epithelial cells.

Loss of 14-3-3σ removes a key safeguard against propagation of DNA damage, allowing cells to bypass the G2/M checkpoint and divide with compromised genomes – an early step in carcinogenesis. Notably, 14-3-3σ is frequently silenced by promoter methylation in a range of epithelial-derived cancers, including breast, lung and colon tumors. This epigenetic inactivation prevents its transcriptional induction by p53 in response to DNA damage, effectively disabling this checkpoint arm and contributing to uncontrolled cell proliferation, genomic instability and resistance to DNA-damaging therapies.

Because 14-3-3σ interacts with multiple cell cycle regulators beyond CDC25C, including transcription factors and apoptotic regulators, its loss can disrupt not only checkpoint arrest but also downstream cell fate decisions, tilting the balance toward uncontrolled proliferation. This has made restoration of 14-3-3σ function, or pharmacologic mimicry of its sequestration activity, an area of interest in cancer therapeutics.

 

References

  1. Aljabal G, Yap BK. 14-3-3σ and its modulators in cancer. Pharmaceuticals (Basel). 2020;13(12):441.
  2. Sun N, Wu Y, Huang B, Liu Q, Dong Y, et al. Decreased expression of 14-3-3 σ, an early event of malignant transformation of respiratory epithelium, also facilitates progression of squamous cell lung cancer. Thorac Cancer. 2015;6(6):715-21.