Actin nucleators safeguard replication forks by limiting nascent strand degradation

Author:

Nieminuszczy Jadwiga1ORCID,Martin Peter R1,Broderick Ronan1,Krwawicz Joanna1,Kanellou Alexandra1,Mocanu Camelia1,Bousgouni Vicky1,Smith Charlotte1,Wen Kuo-Kuang2,Woodward Beth L3,Bakal Chris1,Shackley Fiona4,Aguilera Andrés5ORCID,Stewart Grant S3,Vyas Yatin M2ORCID,Niedzwiedz Wojciech1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cancer Biology, The Institute of Cancer Research , London SW3 6JB, UK

2. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Hematology-Oncology, Penn State College of Medicine, Penn State Health Children's Hospital , Hershey , PA 17033, USA

3. Genome Stability and Human Disease Laboratory, Institute of Cancer and Genomic Sciences, University of Birmingham , Birmingham B15 2TT, UK

4. Paediatric Immunology, Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Sheffield Children's Hospital NHS Foundation Trust , Sheffield , UK

5. Centro Andaluz de Biología Molecular y Medicina Regenerativa CABIMER, Universidad de Sevilla-CSIC-Universidad Pablo de Olavide , Seville , Spain

Abstract

Abstract Accurate genome replication is essential for all life and a key mechanism of disease prevention, underpinned by the ability of cells to respond to replicative stress (RS) and protect replication forks. These responses rely on the formation of Replication Protein A (RPA)-single stranded (ss) DNA complexes, yet this process remains largely uncharacterized. Here, we establish that actin nucleation-promoting factors (NPFs) associate with replication forks, promote efficient DNA replication and facilitate association of RPA with ssDNA at sites of RS. Accordingly, their loss leads to deprotection of ssDNA at perturbed forks, impaired ATR activation, global replication defects and fork collapse. Supplying an excess of RPA restores RPA foci formation and fork protection, suggesting a chaperoning role for actin nucleators (ANs) (i.e. Arp2/3, DIAPH1) and NPFs (i.e, WASp, N-WASp) in regulating RPA availability upon RS. We also discover that β-actin interacts with RPA directly in vitro, and in vivo a hyper-depolymerizing β-actin mutant displays a heightened association with RPA and the same dysfunctional replication phenotypes as loss of ANs/NPFs, which contrasts with the phenotype of a hyper-polymerizing β-actin mutant. Thus, we identify components of actin polymerization pathways that are essential for preventing ectopic nucleolytic degradation of perturbed forks by modulating RPA activity.

Funder

CR-UK Programme

BBSRC

National Institutes of Health

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

European Research Council

CR-UK Clinical Academic Training Programme

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

Reference70 articles.

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5. Replication fork reversal in eukaryotes: from dead end to dynamic response. Nature reviews;Neelsen;Mol. Cell Biol.,2015

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