Mechanism of structure-specific DNA binding by the FANCM branchpoint translocase

Author:

Abbouche Lara12,Murphy Vincent J1,Gao Jixuan3,van Twest Sylvie1,Sobinoff Alexander P3,Auweiler Karen M14,Pickett Hilda A3ORCID,Bythell-Douglas Rohan1,Deans Andrew J12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Genome Stability Unit, St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research , Fitzroy , VIC, Australia

2. Department of Medicine (St Vincent's), University of Melbourne , Fitzroy , VIC, Australia

3. Children's Medical Research Institute , Westmead , NSW , Australia

4. Julius-Maximilians-University of Würzburg , Germany

Abstract

Abstract FANCM is a DNA repair protein that recognizes stalled replication forks, and recruits downstream repair factors. FANCM activity is also essential for the survival of cancer cells that utilize the Alternative Lengthening of Telomeres (ALT) mechanism. FANCM efficiently recognizes stalled replication forks in the genome or at telomeres through its strong affinity for branched DNA structures. In this study, we demonstrate that the N-terminal translocase domain drives this specific branched DNA recognition. The Hel2i subdomain within the translocase is crucial for effective substrate engagement and couples DNA binding to catalytic ATP-dependent branch migration. Removal of Hel2i or mutation of key DNA-binding residues within this domain diminished FANCM’s affinity for junction DNA and abolished branch migration activity. Importantly, these mutant FANCM variants failed to rescue the cell cycle arrest, telomere-associated replication stress, or lethality of ALT-positive cancer cells depleted of endogenous FANCM. Our results reveal the Hel2i domain is key for FANCM to properly engage DNA substrates, and therefore plays an essential role in its tumour-suppressive functions by restraining the hyperactivation of the ALT pathway.

Funder

National Breast Cancer Foundation

National Health and Medical Research Council

Medical research future fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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