Publication:
WASp modulates RPA function on single-stranded DNA in response to replication stress and DNA damage.

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2022-06-29

Authors

Han, Seong-Su
Wen, Kuo-Kuang
García-Rubio, María L
Wold, Marc S
Aguilera, Andrés
Niedzwiedz, Wojciech
Vyas, Yatin M

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Perturbation in the replication-stress response (RSR) and DNA-damage response (DDR) causes genomic instability. Genomic instability occurs in Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS), a primary immunodeficiency disorder, yet the mechanism remains largely uncharacterized. Replication protein A (RPA), a single-strand DNA (ssDNA) binding protein, has key roles in the RSR and DDR. Here we show that human WAS-protein (WASp) modulates RPA functions at perturbed replication forks (RFs). Following genotoxic insult, WASp accumulates at RFs, associates with RPA, and promotes RPA:ssDNA complexation. WASp deficiency in human lymphocytes destabilizes RPA:ssDNA-complexes, impairs accumulation of RPA, ATR, ETAA1, and TOPBP1 at genotoxin-perturbed RFs, decreases CHK1 activation, and provokes global RF dysfunction. las17 (yeast WAS-homolog)-deficient S. cerevisiae also show decreased ScRPA accumulation at perturbed RFs, impaired DNA recombination, and increased frequency of DNA double-strand break (DSB)-induced single-strand annealing (SSA). Consequently, WASp (or Las17)-deficient cells show increased frequency of DSBs upon genotoxic insult. Our study reveals an evolutionarily conserved, essential role of WASp in the DNA stress-resolution pathway, such that WASp deficiency provokes RPA dysfunction-coupled genomic instability.

Description

MeSH Terms

Animals
Antigens, Surface
DNA Breaks, Double-Stranded
DNA Repair
DNA Replication
DNA, Single-Stranded
DNA-Binding Proteins
Genomic Instability
Humans
Protein Binding
Replication Protein A
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome Protein

DeCS Terms

CIE Terms

Keywords

Citation