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RNF8 ubiquitylation of XRN2 facilitates R-loop resolution and restrains genomic instability in BRCA1 mutant cells.

Rehna KrishnanMariah LapierreBrandon GautreauKevin C J NixonSamah El GhamrasniParasvi S PatelJun HaoV Talya YerliciKiran Kumar Naidu GuturiJonathan St-GermainFrancesca MateoAmine SaadArash AlgounehRebecca EarnshawDuan ShiliAlma SeitovaJoshua MillerNegin KhosravianiAdam PennBrandon HoOtto SanchezM Prakash HandeJean-Yves MassonGrant W BrownMoulay Alaoui-JamaliJohn J ReynoldsCheryl ArrowsmithBrian RaughtMiguel A PujanaKarim MekhailGrant S StewartAnne HakemRazqallah Hakem
Published in: Nucleic acids research (2023)
Breast cancer linked with BRCA1/2 mutations commonly recur and resist current therapies, including PARP inhibitors. Given the lack of effective targeted therapies for BRCA1-mutant cancers, we sought to identify novel targets to selectively kill these cancers. Here, we report that loss of RNF8 significantly protects Brca1-mutant mice against mammary tumorigenesis. RNF8 deficiency in human BRCA1-mutant breast cancer cells was found to promote R-loop accumulation and replication fork instability, leading to increased DNA damage, senescence, and synthetic lethality. Mechanistically, RNF8 interacts with XRN2, which is crucial for transcription termination and R-loop resolution. We report that RNF8 ubiquitylates XRN2 to facilitate its recruitment to R-loop-prone genomic loci and that RNF8 deficiency in BRCA1-mutant breast cancer cells decreases XRN2 occupancy at R-loop-prone sites, thereby promoting R-loop accumulation, transcription-replication collisions, excessive genomic instability, and cancer cell death. Collectively, our work identifies a synthetic lethal interaction between RNF8 and BRCA1, which is mediated by a pathological accumulation of R-loops.
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