Cross-species investigation into the requirement of XPA for nucleotide excision repair

Author:

Kose Cansu1ORCID,Cao Xuemei1ORCID,Dewey Evan B2ORCID,Malkoç Mustafa3ORCID,Adebali Ogün34ORCID,Sekelsky Jeff2ORCID,Lindsey-Boltz Laura A1ORCID,Sancar Aziz1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of North Carolina School of Medicine , Chapel Hill, NC , USA

2. Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill, NC , USA

3. Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences, Sabanci University , Istanbul , Türkiye

4. Department of Computational Science-Biological Sciences, TÜBITAK Research Institute for Fundamental Sciences , Gebze , Türkiye

Abstract

Abstract After reconstitution of nucleotide excision repair (excision repair) with XPA, RPA, XPC, TFIIH, XPF-ERCC1 and XPG, it was concluded that these six factors are the minimal essential components of the excision repair machinery. All six factors are highly conserved across diverse organisms spanning yeast to humans, yet no identifiable homolog of the XPA gene exists in many eukaryotes including green plants. Nevertheless, excision repair is reported to be robust in the XPA-lacking organism, Arabidopsis thaliana, which raises a fundamental question of whether excision repair could occur without XPA in other organisms. Here, we performed a phylogenetic analysis of XPA across all species with annotated genomes and then quantitatively measured excision repair in the absence of XPA using the sensitive whole-genome qXR-Seq method in human cell lines and two model organisms, Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster. We find that although the absence of XPA results in inefficient excision repair and UV-sensitivity in humans, flies, and worms, excision repair of UV-induced DNA damage is detectable over background. These studies have yielded a significant discovery regarding the evolution of XPA protein and its mechanistic role in nucleotide excision repair.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Scientific and Technological Research Council of Türkiye

EMBO

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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