p53 orchestrates DNA replication restart homeostasis by suppressing mutagenic RAD52 and POLθ pathways

Author:

Roy Sunetra1,Tomaszowski Karl-Heinz1,Luzwick Jessica W1,Park Soyoung1,Li Jun2,Murphy Maureen3ORCID,Schlacher Katharina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cancer Biology, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, United States

2. Department of Genomic Medicine, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, United States

3. Molecular and Cellular Oncogenesis Program, The Wistar Institute, Philadelphia, United States

Abstract

Classically, p53 tumor suppressor acts in transcription, apoptosis, and cell cycle arrest. Yet, replication-mediated genomic instability is integral to oncogenesis, and p53 mutations promote tumor progression and drug-resistance. By delineating human and murine separation-of-function p53 alleles, we find that p53 null and gain-of-function (GOF) mutations exhibit defects in restart of stalled or damaged DNA replication forks that drive genomic instability, which isgenetically separable from transcription activation. By assaying protein-DNA fork interactions in single cells, we unveil a p53-MLL3-enabled recruitment of MRE11 DNA replication restart nuclease. Importantly, p53 defects or depletion unexpectedly allow mutagenic RAD52 and POLθ pathways to hijack stalled forks, which we find reflected in p53 defective breast-cancer patient COSMIC mutational signatures. These data uncover p53 as a keystone regulator of replication homeostasis within a DNA restart network. Mechanistically, this has important implications for development of resistance in cancer therapy. Combined, these results define an unexpected role for p53-mediated suppression of replication genome instability.

Funder

Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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