AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists found a way to tag proteins at DNA damage sites using a special enzyme called BirA, which helps them discover important proteins involved in repairing DNA.
  • One of these proteins is called ZPET, which helps protect DNA when it gets damaged and stops another protein (MRE11) from fixing it too quickly.
  • When they removed ZPET from cells, the cells got better at repairing DNA damage, showing ZPET usually slows down the repair process to keep things in check.

Article Abstract

Numerous DNA repair and signaling proteins function at DNA damage sites to protect the genome. Here, we show that fusion of the promiscuous biotin ligase BirA with RAD18 leads to localized protein biotinylation at DNA damage sites, allowing identification of ZPET (zinc finger protein proximal to RAD eighteen)/ZNF280C as a potential DNA damage response (DDR) protein. ZPET binds ssDNA and localizes to DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and stalled replication forks. In vitro, ZPET inhibits MRE11 binding to ssDNA. In cells, ZPET delays MRE11 binding to chromatin after DSB formation and slows DNA end resection through binding ssDNA. ZPET hinders resection independently of 53BP1 and HELB. Cells lacking ZPET displayed enhanced homologous recombination (HR), accelerated replication forks under stress, and increased resistance to DSBs and PARP inhibition. These results not only reveal ZPET as an HR repressor but also suggest that localized protein biotinylation at DNA damage sites is a useful strategy to identify DDR proteins.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6317314PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gad.315978.118DOI Listing

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