SCAI promotes error-free repair of DNA interstrand crosslinks via the Fanconi anemia pathway.
Lisa SchubertIvo A HendriksEmil P T HertzWei WuSelene Sellés-BaigetSaskia HoffmannKeerthana Stine ViswalingamIrene GallinaSatyakrishna PentakotaBente BenedictJoachim JohansenKatja ApeltMartijn S LuijsterburgSimon RasmussenMichael LisbyYing LiuMichael L NielsenNiels MailandJulien P DuxinPublished in: EMBO reports (2022)
DNA interstrand crosslinks (ICLs) are cytotoxic lesions that threaten genome integrity. The Fanconi anemia (FA) pathway orchestrates ICL repair during DNA replication, with ubiquitylated FANCI-FANCD2 (ID2) marking the activation step that triggers incisions on DNA to unhook the ICL. Restoration of intact DNA requires the coordinated actions of polymerase ζ (Polζ)-mediated translesion synthesis (TLS) and homologous recombination (HR). While the proteins mediating FA pathway activation have been well characterized, the effectors regulating repair pathway choice to promote error-free ICL resolution remain poorly defined. Here, we uncover an indispensable role of SCAI in ensuring error-free ICL repair upon activation of the FA pathway. We show that SCAI forms a complex with Polζ and localizes to ICLs during DNA replication. SCAI-deficient cells are exquisitely sensitive to ICL-inducing drugs and display major hallmarks of FA gene inactivation. In the absence of SCAI, HR-mediated ICL repair is defective, and breaks are instead re-ligated by polymerase θ-dependent microhomology-mediated end-joining, generating deletions spanning the ICL site and radial chromosomes. Our work establishes SCAI as an integral FA pathway component, acting at the interface between TLS and HR to promote error-free ICL repair.