E3 ligase RFWD3 is a novel modulator of stalled fork stability in BRCA2-deficient cells

Author:

Duan Haohui12,Mansour Sarah2,Reed Rachel3,Gillis Margaret K.2,Parent Benjamin3,Liu Ben3,Sztupinszki Zsofia4,Birkbak Nicolai56ORCID,Szallasi Zoltan47,Elia Andrew E.H.8ORCID,Garber Judy E.3,Pathania Shailja12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Personalized Cancer Therapy, University of Massachusetts, Boston, MA

2. Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts, Boston, MA

3. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA

4. Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark

5. Department of Molecular Medicine, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark

6. Bioinformatics Research Centre, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark

7. Boston Children’s Hospital, Computational Health Informatics Program, Boston, MA

8. Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Radiation Oncology, Center for Cancer Research, Boston, MA

Abstract

BRCA1/2 help maintain genomic integrity by stabilizing stalled forks. Here, we identify the E3 ligase RFWD3 as an essential modulator of stalled fork stability in BRCA2-deficient cells and show that codepletion of RFWD3 rescues fork degradation, collapse, and cell sensitivity upon replication stress. Stalled forks in BRCA2-deficient cells accumulate phosphorylated and ubiquitinated replication protein A (ubq-pRPA), the latter of which is mediated by RFWD3. Generation of this intermediate requires SMARCAL1, suggesting that it depends on stalled fork reversal. We show that in BRCA2-deficient cells, rescuing fork degradation might not be sufficient to ensure fork repair. Depleting MRE11 in BRCA2-deficient cells does block fork degradation, but it does not prevent fork collapse and cell sensitivity in the presence of replication stress. No such ubq-pRPA intermediate is formed in BRCA1-deficient cells, and our results suggest that BRCA1 may function upstream of BRCA2 in the stalled fork repair pathway. Collectively, our data uncover a novel mechanism by which RFWD3 destabilizes forks in BRCA2-deficient cells.

Funder

Breast Cancer Research Foundation

Dana Farber/Harvard Cancer Center

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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