Publication:
Methylation of the central transcriptional regulator KLF4 by PRMT5 is required for DNA end resection and recombination.

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2020-06-27

Authors

Checa-Rodríguez, Cintia
Cepeda-García, Cristina
Ramón, Javier
López-Saavedra, Ana
Balestra, Fernando R
Domínguez-Sánchez, María S
Gómez-Cabello, Daniel
Huertas, Pablo

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Cell fitness and survival upon exposure to DNA damage depends on the repair of DNA lesions. Interestingly, cellular identity does affect and finetunes such response, although the molecular basis of such differences between tissues and cell types is not well understood. Thus, a possibility is that DNA repair itself is controlled by the mechanisms that govern cell identity. Here we show that the KLF4, involved in cellular homeostasis, proliferation, cell reprogramming and cancer development, directly regulates resection and homologous recombination proficiency. Indeed, resection efficiency follows KLF4 protein levels, i.e. decreases upon KLF4 downregulation and increases when is overexpressed. Moreover, KLF4 role in resection requires its methylation by the methyl-transferase PRMT5. Thus, PRMT5 depletion not only mimics KLF4 downregulation, but also showed an epistatic genetic relationship. Our data support a model in which the methylation of KLF4 by PRMT5 is a priming event required to license DNA resection and homologous recombination.

Description

MeSH Terms

Cell Line, Tumor
DNA
DNA Breaks, Double-Stranded
DNA End-Joining Repair
Epistasis, Genetic
Gene Expression Regulation
Humans
Kruppel-Like Factor 4
Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors
Methylation
Protein Processing, Post-Translational
Protein-Arginine N-Methyltransferases
Recombinational DNA Repair

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

DNA end resection, DNA repair, KLF4, PRMT5, Recombination

Citation