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Live cell transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair dynamics revisited.

Diana A Llerena Schiffmacher ,
Katarzyna W Kliza ,
Arjan F Theil ,
Gert-Jan Kremers ,
Jeroen A A Demmers ,
Tomoo Ogi ,
Michiel Vermeulen ,
Wim Vermeulen ,
Alex Pines

Abstract

Transcription-blocking lesions are specifically targeted by transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (TC-NER), which prevents DNA damage-induced cellular toxicity and maintains proper transcriptional processes. TC-NER is initiated by the stalling of RNA polymerase II (RNAPII), which triggers the assembly of TC-NER-specific proteins, namely CSB, CSA and UVSSA, which collectively control and drive TC-NER progression. Previous research has revealed molecular functions for these proteins, however, exact mechanisms governing the initiation and regulation of TC-NER, particularly at low UV doses have remained elusive, partly due to technical constraints. In this study, we employ knock-in cell lines designed to target the endogenous CSB gene locus with mClover, a GFP variant. Through live cell imaging, we uncover the intricate molecular dynamics of CSB in response to physiologically relevant UV doses. We showed that the DNA damage-induced association of CSB with chromatin is tightly regulated by the CSA-containing ubiquitin-ligase CRL complex (CRL4CSA). Combining the CSB-mClover knock-in cell line with SILAC-based GFP-mediated complex isolation and mass-spectrometry-based proteomics, revealed novel putative CSB interactors as well as discernible variations in complex composition during distinct stages of TC-NER progression. Our work not only provides molecular insight into TC-NER, but also illustrates the versatility of endogenously tagging fluorescent and affinity tags.

More about this publication

DNA repair

Volume 130
Pages 103566
Publication date 01-10-2023

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1016/j.dnarep.2023.103566
Europe PubMed Central 37716192
Pubmed 37716192

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