Author
Listed:
- Tianpeng Zhang
(University of Pennsylvania)
- Yashpal Rawal
(University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio)
- Haoyang Jiang
(University of Pennsylvania)
- Youngho Kwon
(University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio)
- Patrick Sung
(University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio)
- Roger A. Greenberg
(University of Pennsylvania)
Abstract
Break-induced telomere synthesis (BITS) is a RAD51-independent form of break-induced replication that contributes to alternative lengthening of telomeres1,2. This homology-directed repair mechanism utilizes a minimal replisome comprising proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and DNA polymerase-δ to execute conservative DNA repair synthesis over many kilobases. How this long-tract homologous recombination repair synthesis responds to complex secondary DNA structures that elicit replication stress remains unclear3–5. Moreover, whether the break-induced replisome orchestrates additional DNA repair events to ensure processivity is also unclear. Here we combine synchronous double-strand break induction with proteomics of isolated chromatin segments (PICh) to capture the telomeric DNA damage response proteome during BITS1,6. This approach revealed a replication stress-dominated response, highlighted by repair synthesis-driven DNA damage tolerance signalling through RAD18-dependent PCNA ubiquitination. Furthermore, the SNM1A nuclease was identified as the major effector of ubiquitinated PCNA-dependent DNA damage tolerance. SNM1A recognizes the ubiquitin-modified break-induced replisome at damaged telomeres, and this directs its nuclease activity to promote resection. These findings show that break-induced replication orchestrates resection-dependent lesion bypass, with SNM1A nuclease activity serving as a critical effector of ubiquitinated PCNA-directed recombination in mammalian cells.
Suggested Citation
Tianpeng Zhang & Yashpal Rawal & Haoyang Jiang & Youngho Kwon & Patrick Sung & Roger A. Greenberg, 2023.
"Break-induced replication orchestrates resection-dependent template switching,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 619(7968), pages 201-208, July.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:619:y:2023:i:7968:d:10.1038_s41586-023-06177-3
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06177-3
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