Faculty Opinions recommendation of Aprataxin resolves adenylated RNA-DNA junctions to maintain genome integrity.

Author(s):  
Susan Lees-Miller
Nature ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 506 (7486) ◽  
pp. 111-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Percy Tumbale ◽  
Jessica S. Williams ◽  
Matthew J. Schellenberg ◽  
Thomas A. Kunkel ◽  
R. Scott Williams

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junfang Song ◽  
Alasdair D. J. Freeman ◽  
Axel Knebel ◽  
Anton Gartner ◽  
David M. J. Lilley

ABSTRACTAll physical connections between sister chromatids must be broken before cells can divide, and eukaryotic cells have evolved multiple ways in which to process branchpoints connecting DNA molecules separated both spatially and temporally. A single DNA link between chromatids has the potential to disrupt cell cycle progression and genome integrity, so it is highly likely that cells require a nuclease that can process remaining unresolved and hemi-resolved DNA junctions and other branched species at the very late stages of mitosis. We argue that ANKLE1 probably serves this function in human cells (LEM-3 in C. elegans). LEM-3 has previously been shown to be located at the cell mid-body, and we show here that human ANKLE1 is a nuclease that cleaves a range of branched DNA species. It thus has the substrate selectivity consistent with an enzyme required to process a variety of unresolved and hemi-resolved branchpoints in DNA. Our results imply that ANKLE1 acts as a catch-all enzyme of last resort that allows faithful chromosome segregation and cell division to occur.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (28) ◽  
pp. eaba5974 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. G. Bennett ◽  
A. M. Wilkie ◽  
E. Antonopoulou ◽  
I. Ceppi ◽  
A. Sanchez ◽  
...  

The remodeling of stalled replication forks to form four-way DNA junctions is an important component of the replication stress response. Nascent DNA at the regressed arms of these reversed forks is protected by RAD51 and the tumor suppressors BRCA1/2, and when this function is compromised, stalled forks undergo pathological MRE11-dependent degradation, leading to chromosomal instability. However, the mechanisms regulating MRE11 functions at reversed forks are currently unclear. Here, we identify the MRE11-binding protein MRNIP as a novel fork protection factor that directly binds to MRE11 and specifically represses its exonuclease activity. The loss of MRNIP results in impaired replication fork progression, MRE11 exonuclease–dependent degradation of reversed forks, persistence of underreplicated genomic regions, chemosensitivity, and chromosome instability. Our findings identify MRNIP as a novel regulator of MRE11 at reversed forks and provide evidence that regulation of specific MRE11 nuclease activities ensures protection of nascent DNA and thereby genome integrity.


BIO-PROTOCOL ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (19) ◽  
Author(s):  
Masaki Odahara ◽  
Takayuki Inouye ◽  
Yoshiki Nishimura ◽  
Yasuhiko Sekine

2009 ◽  
Vol 66 (19) ◽  
pp. 3219-3234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosy El Ramy ◽  
Najat Magroun ◽  
Nadia Messadecq ◽  
Laurent R. Gauthier ◽  
François D. Boussin ◽  
...  
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