Publication:
A genome-wide screening uncovers the role of CCAR2 as an antagonist of DNA end resection.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2016-08-09

Authors

López-Saavedra, Ana
Gómez-Cabello, Daniel
Domínguez-Sánchez, María Salud
Mejías-Navarro, Fernando
Fernández-Ávila, María Jesús
Dinant, Christoffel
Martínez-Macías, María Isabel
Bartek, Jiri
Huertas, Pablo

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

There are two major and alternative pathways to repair DNA double-strand breaks: non-homologous end-joining and homologous recombination. Here we identify and characterize novel factors involved in choosing between these pathways; in this study we took advantage of the SeeSaw Reporter, in which the repair of double-strand breaks by homology-independent or -dependent mechanisms is distinguished by the accumulation of green or red fluorescence, respectively. Using a genome-wide human esiRNA (endoribonuclease-prepared siRNA) library, we isolate genes that control the recombination/end-joining ratio. Here we report that two distinct sets of genes are involved in the control of the balance between NHEJ and HR: those that are required to facilitate recombination and those that favour NHEJ. This last category includes CCAR2/DBC1, which we show inhibits recombination by limiting the initiation and the extent of DNA end resection, thereby acting as an antagonist of CtIP.

Description

MeSH Terms

Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing
Carrier Proteins
Cell Line, Tumor
Chromatin
DNA Damage
DNA End-Joining Repair
Endodeoxyribonucleases
Gene Regulatory Networks
Genome, Human
Humans
Models, Biological
Nuclear Proteins
Protein Binding
Recombinational DNA Repair

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

Citation