Lamin A/C Depletion Enhances DNA Damage-Induced Stalled Replication Fork Arrest

Author:

Singh Mayank,Hunt Clayton R.,Pandita Raj K.,Kumar Rakesh,Yang Chin-Rang,Horikoshi Nobuo,Bachoo Robert,Serag Sara,Story Michael D.,Shay Jerry W.,Powell Simon N.,Gupta Arun,Jeffery Jessie,Pandita Shruti,Chen Benjamin P. C.,Deckbar Dorothee,Löbrich Markus,Yang Qin,Khanna Kum Kum,Worman Howard J.,Pandita Tej K.

Abstract

The humanLMNAgene encodes the essential nuclear envelope proteins lamin A and C (lamin A/C). Mutations inLMNAresult in altered nuclear morphology, but how this impacts the mechanisms that maintain genomic stability is unclear. Here, we report that lamin A/C-deficient cells have a normal response to ionizing radiation but are sensitive to agents that cause interstrand cross-links (ICLs) or replication stress. In response to treatment with ICL agents (cisplatin, camptothecin, and mitomycin), lamin A/C-deficient cells displayed normal γ-H2AX focus formation but a higher frequency of cells with delayed γ-H2AX removal, decreased recruitment of the FANCD2 repair factor, and a higher frequency of chromosome aberrations. Similarly, following hydroxyurea-induced replication stress, lamin A/C-deficient cells had an increased frequency of cells with delayed disappearance of γ-H2AX foci and defective repair factor recruitment (Mre11, CtIP, Rad51, RPA, and FANCD2). Replicative stress also resulted in a higher frequency of chromosomal aberrations as well as defective replication restart. Taken together, the data can be interpreted to suggest that lamin A/C has a role in the restart of stalled replication forks, a prerequisite for initiation of DNA damage repair by the homologous recombination pathway, which is intact in lamin A/C-deficient cells. We propose that lamin A/C is required for maintaining genomic stability following replication fork stalling, induced by either ICL damage or replicative stress, in order to facilitate fork regression prior to DNA damage repair.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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