Mechanisms of DNA hand-off during lesion repair in BER and NER
Project Number3R01GM130746-04S1
Former NumberR01GM130746-05W1
Contact PI/Project LeaderANTONY, EDWIN
Awardee OrganizationSAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
SUMMARY
Exposure to environmental toxins, radiation and errors in endogenous DNA metabolism give rise to DNA
damage. Knowledge of the cellular DNA repair mechanisms that correct such DNA lesions are vital towards
combating genomic instability – a prevailing cause of cancers and associated disorders. To correct such errors,
double stranded DNA is unwound and the transiently opened single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) is protected and
coated by Replication Protein A (RPA), a high affinity multi-domain enzyme. Formation of RPA-ssDNA
complexes trigger the DNA repair checkpoint response and is a key step in activating most DNA repair pathways.
ssDNA-bound by RPA is handed-off to lesion-specific DNA repair proteins. The precise mechanisms of how this
functional specificity is achieved is poorly resolved. Towards addressing this gap in knowledge, our long-term
goals are to answer the following questions: a) RPA physically interacts with over two dozen DNA processing
enzymes; how are these interactions determined and prioritized? b) RPA binds to ssDNA with high affinity (KD
>10-10 M); how do DNA metabolic enzymes that bind to DNA with micromolar affinities remove RPA? c) Does
RPA play a role in positioning the recruited enzymes (with appropriate polarity) onto the DNA? d) How are the
DNA and protein interaction activities of RPA tuned by post translational modifications? To address these
questions, and to investigate the dynamics of RPA in the presence of multiple other DNA binding enzymes, we
have successfully developed an experimental strategy where the individual DNA binding domains (DBDs) of
RPA are labeled with a fluorophore. Upon binding to ssDNA, a robust change in fluorescence is observed and
thus serves as a real-time reporter of its dynamics on DNA. We achieved this through incorporation of non-
canonical amino acids and attachment of fluorophores using strain promoted click chemistry. Using this
methodology, we have uncovered how each domain within RPA binds/dissociates on ssDNA and present a new
paradigm for RPA function. There are six distinct subdomains (A - F) in RPA and, for over three decades, DBD-
A & B have been thought to bind with highest affinity based on biochemical investigation of isolated DBDs. These
findings have served as a foundation for all models of RPA in DNA replication, repair and recombination. Our
work capturing RPA dynamics in the full-length context reveals the opposite, where DBDs A & B are highly
dynamic whereas DBDs C & D are stable. These startling findings alter the existing paradigm for RPA function
and form the basis of the proposed work investigating how specific RPA interacting proteins (RIPs) gain access
to DNA. Specifically, RPA modeling by NEIL1 and UNG2 during base excision repair (Aim 1) and by XPA during
nucleotide excision repair (Aim 2) will be investigated. In addition, the role of phosphorylation in determining RPA
specificity in DNA repair will be explored (Aim 3). Results from the proposed work will delineate how RIPs interact
with RPA, remodel its DBDs and gain access to the buried ssDNA.
Public Health Relevance Statement
NARRATIVE
Defects in nucleotide excision repair (NER) and base excision repair (BER) are associated with genomic
instability resulting in a variety of cancers and inherited disorders. The proposed studies will delineate the
mechanism by which cells repair lesions that occur through environmental carcinogens and endogenous
metabolic errors. The results from our research will have a direct relevance to understanding how mutations in
these enzymes cause cancer in order to better direct therapeutic interventions.
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