Nucleolar detention of NONO shields DNA double-strand breaks from aberrant transcripts.
Barbara TrifaultVictoria MamontovaGiacomo CossaSabina GanskihYuanjie WeiJulia HofstetterPranjali BhandareApoorva BaluapuriBlanca NietoDaniel SolvieCarsten P AdePeter GallantElmar WolfDorthe Helena LarsenMathias MunschauerKaspar BurgerPublished in: Nucleic acids research (2024)
RNA-binding proteins emerge as effectors of the DNA damage response (DDR). The multifunctional non-POU domain-containing octamer-binding protein NONO/p54nrb marks nuclear paraspeckles in unperturbed cells, but also undergoes re-localization to the nucleolus upon induction of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). However, NONO nucleolar re-localization is poorly understood. Here we show that the topoisomerase II inhibitor etoposide stimulates the production of RNA polymerase II-dependent, DNA damage-inducible antisense intergenic non-coding RNA (asincRNA) in human cancer cells. Such transcripts originate from distinct nucleolar intergenic spacer regions and form DNA-RNA hybrids to tether NONO to the nucleolus in an RNA recognition motif 1 domain-dependent manner. NONO occupancy at protein-coding gene promoters is reduced by etoposide, which attenuates pre-mRNA synthesis, enhances NONO binding to pre-mRNA transcripts and is accompanied by nucleolar detention of a subset of such transcripts. The depletion or mutation of NONO interferes with detention and prolongs DSB signalling. Together, we describe a nucleolar DDR pathway that shields NONO and aberrant transcripts from DSBs to promote DNA repair.
Keyphrases
- dna repair
- dna damage
- dna damage response
- nucleic acid
- binding protein
- circulating tumor
- cell free
- single molecule
- endothelial cells
- oxidative stress
- induced apoptosis
- drug delivery
- gene expression
- cell death
- genome wide
- cell proliferation
- small molecule
- cell cycle arrest
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- protein protein
- genome wide analysis
- signaling pathway