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XRCC1 counteracts poly(ADP ribose)polymerase (PARP) poisons, olaparib and talazoparib, and a clinical alkylating agent, temozolomide, by promoting the removal of trapped PARP1 from broken DNA.

Kouji HirotaMasato OokaNaoto ShimizuKousei YamadaMasataka TsudaMahmoud Abdelghany IbrahimShintaro YamadaHiroyuki SasanumaMitsuko MasutaniShunichi Takeda
Published in: Genes to cells : devoted to molecular & cellular mechanisms (2022)
Base excision repair (BER) removes damaged bases by generating single-strand breaks (SSBs), gap-filling by DNA polymerase β (POLβ), and resealing SSBs. A base-damaging agent, methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) is widely used to study BER. BER increases cellular tolerance to MMS, anti-cancer base-damaging drugs, temozolomide, carmustine, and lomustine, and to clinical poly(ADP ribose)polymerase (PARP) poisons, olaparib and talazoparib. The poisons stabilize PARP1/SSB complexes, inhibiting access of BER factors to SSBs. PARP1 and XRCC1 collaboratively promote SSB resealing by recruiting POLβ to SSBs, but XRCC1 -/- cells are much more sensitive to MMS than PARP1 -/- cells. We recently report that the PARP1 loss in XRCC1 -/- cells restores their MMS tolerance and conclude that XPCC1 facilitates the release of PARP1 from SSBs by maintaining its autoPARylation. We here show that the PARP1 loss in XRCC1 -/- cells also restores their tolerance to the three anti-cancer base-damaging drugs, although they and MMS induce different sets of base damage. We reveal the synthetic lethality of the XRCC1 -/- mutation, but not POLβ -/- , with olaparib and talazoparib, indicating that XRCC1 is a unique BER factor in suppressing toxic PARP1/SSB complex and can suppress even when PARP1 catalysis is inhibited. In conclusion, XRCC1 suppresses the PARP1/SSB complex via PARP1 catalysis-dependent and independent mechanisms.
Keyphrases
  • dna repair
  • dna damage
  • induced apoptosis
  • signaling pathway
  • cell cycle arrest
  • oxidative stress
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • cell proliferation
  • single cell
  • nucleic acid