Exo1 phosphorylation inhibits exonuclease activity and prevents fork collapse in rad53 mutants independently of the 14-3-3 proteins

Author:

Morafraile Esther C1,Bugallo Alberto1,Carreira Raquel2,Fernández María1,Martín-Castellanos Cristina1,Blanco Miguel G2,Segurado Mónica13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Biología Funcional y Genómica (CSIC/USAL), Campus Miguel de Unamuno, Salamanca 37007, Spain

2. Departamento de Bioquímica y Biología Molecular, Centro de Investigación en Medicina Molecular y Enfermedades Crónicas (CIMUS) - Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria (IDIS), Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, 15782 Santiago de Compostela, Spain

3. Departamento de Microbiología y Genética, Campus Miguel de Unamuno, Universidad de Salamanca, Salamanca 37007, Spain

Abstract

Abstract The S phase checkpoint is crucial to maintain genome stability under conditions that threaten DNA replication. One of its critical functions is to prevent Exo1-dependent fork degradation, and Exo1 is phosphorylated in response to different genotoxic agents. Exo1 seemed to be regulated by several post-translational modifications in the presence of replicative stress, but the specific contribution of checkpoint-dependent phosphorylation to Exo1 control and fork stability is not clear. We show here that Exo1 phosphorylation is Dun1-independent and Rad53-dependent in response to DNA damage or dNTP depletion, and in both situations Exo1 is similarly phosphorylated at multiple sites. To investigate the correlation between Exo1 phosphorylation and fork stability, we have generated phospho-mimic exo1 alleles that rescue fork collapse in rad53 mutants as efficiently as exo1-nuclease dead mutants or the absence of Exo1, arguing that Rad53-dependent phosphorylation is the mayor requirement to preserve fork stability. We have also shown that this rescue is Bmh1–2 independent, arguing that the 14-3-3 proteins are dispensable for fork stabilization, at least when Exo1 is downregulated. Importantly, our results indicated that phosphorylation specifically inhibits the 5' to 3'exo-nuclease activity, suggesting that this activity of Exo1 and not the flap-endonuclease, is the enzymatic activity responsible of the collapse of stalled replication forks in checkpoint mutants.

Funder

Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness

University of Salamanca

MINECO

AEI

Xunta de Galicia

FEDER

Junta de Castilla y León

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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