DSS1 restrains BRCA2's engagement with dsDNA for homologous recombination, replication fork protection, and R-loop homeostasis.
Yuxin HuangWenjing LiTzeh Keong FooJae-Hoon JiBo WuNozomi TomimatsuQingming FangBoya GaoMelissa LongJingfei XuRouf MaqboolBipasha MukherjeeTengyang NiSalvador AlejoYuan HeSandeep BurmaLi LanBing XiaWeixing ZhaoPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
DSS1, essential for BRCA2-RAD51 dependent homologous recombination (HR), associates with the helical domain (HD) and OB fold 1 (OB1) of the BRCA2 DSS1/DNA-binding domain (DBD) which is frequently targeted by cancer-associated pathogenic variants. Herein, we reveal robust ss/dsDNA binding abilities in HD-OB1 subdomains and find that DSS1 shuts down HD-OB1's DNA binding to enable ssDNA targeting of the BRCA2-RAD51 complex. We show that C-terminal helix mutations of DSS1, including the cancer-associated R57Q mutation, disrupt this DSS1 regulation and permit dsDNA binding of HD-OB1/BRCA2-DBD. Importantly, these DSS1 mutations impair BRCA2/RAD51 ssDNA loading and focus formation and cause decreased HR efficiency, destabilization of stalled forks and R-loop accumulation, and hypersensitize cells to DNA-damaging agents. We propose that DSS1 restrains the intrinsic dsDNA binding of BRCA2-DBD to ensure BRCA2/RAD51 targeting to ssDNA, thereby promoting optimal execution of HR, and potentially replication fork protection and R-loop suppression.