Rad9/53BP1 promotes DNA repair via crossover recombination by limiting the Sgs1 and Mph1 helicases.
Matteo FerrariChetan C RawalSamuele LodovichiMaria Y VietriAchille PellicioliPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
The DNA damage checkpoint (DDC) is often robustly activated during the homologous recombination (HR) repair of DNA double strand breaks (DSBs). DDC activation controls several HR repair factors by phosphorylation, preventing premature segregation of entangled chromosomes formed during HR repair. The DDC mediator 53BP1/Rad9 limits the nucleolytic processing (resection) of a DSB, controlling the formation of the 3' single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) filament needed for recombination, from yeast to human. Here we show that Rad9 promotes stable annealing between the recombinogenic filament and the donor template in yeast, limiting strand rejection by the Sgs1 and Mph1 helicases. This regulation allows repair by long tract gene conversion, crossover recombination and break-induced replication (BIR), only after DDC activation. These findings shed light on how cells couple DDC with the choice and effectiveness of HR sub-pathways, with implications for genome instability and cancer.
Keyphrases
- dna repair
- dna damage
- oxidative stress
- dna damage response
- endothelial cells
- circulating tumor
- induced apoptosis
- single molecule
- randomized controlled trial
- genome wide
- cell cycle arrest
- papillary thyroid
- diabetic rats
- signaling pathway
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- clinical trial
- nucleic acid
- cell proliferation
- gene expression
- study protocol
- squamous cell
- protein kinase
- cell death
- high resolution
- cell cycle
- molecularly imprinted
- young adults