MutSβ protects common fragile sites by facilitating homology-directed repair at DNA double-strand breaks with secondary structures

Author:

Li Youhang12,Zhang Yunkun1,Shah Sameer Bikram2,Chang Chia-Yu2,Wang Hailong1ORCID,Wu Xiaohua2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Beijing Key Laboratory of DNA Damage Response and College of Life Sciences, Capital Normal University , Beijing  100048 , China

2. Department of Molecular Medicine, The Scripps Research Institute , La Jolla , CA 92037, USA

Abstract

Abstract Common fragile sites (CFSs) are regions prone to chromosomal rearrangements, thereby contributing to tumorigenesis. Under replication stress (RS), CFSs often harbor under-replicated DNA regions at the onset of mitosis, triggering homology-directed repair known as mitotic DNA synthesis (MiDAS) to complete DNA replication. In this study, we identified an important role of DNA mismatch repair protein MutSβ (MSH2/MSH3) in facilitating MiDAS and maintaining CFS stability. Specifically, we demonstrated that MutSβ is required for the increased mitotic recombination induced by RS or FANCM loss at CFS-derived AT-rich and structure-prone sequences (CFS-ATs). We also found that MSH3 exhibits synthetic lethality with FANCM. Mechanistically, MutSβ is required for homologous recombination (HR) especially when DNA double-strand break (DSB) ends contain secondary structures. We also showed that upon RS, MutSβ is recruited to Flex1, a specific CFS-AT, in a PCNA-dependent but MUS81-independent manner. Furthermore, MutSβ interacts with RAD52 and promotes RAD52 recruitment to Flex1 following MUS81-dependent fork cleavage. RAD52, in turn, recruits XPF/ERCC1 to remove DNA secondary structures at DSB ends, enabling HR/break-induced replication (BIR) at CFS-ATs. We propose that the specific requirement of MutSβ in processing DNA secondary structures at CFS-ATs underlies its crucial role in promoting MiDAS and maintaining CFS integrity.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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