Author:
Kochenova Olga V.,D’Alessandro Giuseppina,Pilger Domenic,Schmid Ernst,Richards Sean L.,Garcia Marcos Rios,Jhujh Satpal S.,Voigt Andrea,Gupta Vipul,Carnie Christopher J.,Wu R. Alex,Gueorguieva Nadia,Stewart Grant S.,Walter Johannes C.,Jackson Stephen P.
Abstract
AbstractThe E3 ubiquitin ligase TRAIP associates with the replisome and helps this molecular machine deal with replication stress. Thus, TRAIP promotes DNA inter-strand crosslink repair by triggering the disassembly of CDC45-MCM2-7-GINS (CMG) helicases that have converged on these lesions. However, disassembly of single CMGs that have stalled temporarily would be deleterious, suggesting that TRAIP must be carefully regulated. Here, we demonstrate that human cells lacking the de-ubiquitylating enzyme USP37 are hypersensitive to topoisomerase poisons and other replication stress-inducing agents. We further show that TRAIP loss rescues the hypersensitivity ofUSP37knockout cells to topoisomerase inhibitors. InXenopusegg extracts depleted of USP37, TRAIP promotes premature CMG ubiquitylation and disassembly when converging replisomes stall. Finally, guided by AlphaFold-Multimer, we discovered that binding to CDC45 mediates USP37’s response to topological stress. In conclusion, we propose that USP37 protects genome stability by preventing TRAIP-dependent CMG unloading when replication stress impedes timely termination.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory