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Mechanistic insights in transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair of ribosomal DNA.

Laurianne DanielElena CeruttiLise-Marie DonnioJulie NonnekensChristophe CarratSimona ZahovaPierre-Olivier MariGiuseppina Giglia-Mari
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2018)
Nucleotide excision repair (NER) guarantees genome integrity against UV light-induced DNA damage. After UV irradiation, cells have to cope with a general transcriptional block. To ensure UV lesions repair specifically on transcribed genes, NER is coupled with transcription in an extremely organized pathway known as transcription-coupled repair. In highly metabolic cells, more than 60% of total cellular transcription results from RNA polymerase I activity. Repair of the mammalian transcribed ribosomal DNA has been scarcely studied. UV lesions severely block RNA polymerase I activity and the full transcription-coupled repair machinery corrects damage on actively transcribed ribosomal DNAs. After UV irradiation, RNA polymerase I is more bound to the ribosomal DNA and both are displaced to the nucleolar periphery. Importantly, the reentry of RNA polymerase I and the ribosomal DNA is dependent on the presence of UV lesions on DNA and independent of transcription restart.
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