| Literature DB >> 28115630 |
Deena Jalal1, Jisha Chalissery1, Ahmed H Hassan1.
Abstract
The genome of the cell is often exposed to DNA damaging agents and therefore requires an intricate well-regulated DNA damage response (DDR) to overcome its deleterious effects. The DDR needs proper regulation for its timely activation, repression, as well as appropriate choice of repair pathway. Studies in Saccharomyces cerevisiae have advanced our understanding of the DNA damage response, as well as the mechanisms the cell employs to maintain genome stability and how these mechanisms are regulated. Eukaryotic cells utilize post-translational modifications as a means for fine-tuning protein functions. Ubiquitylation and SUMOylation involve the attachment of small protein molecules onto proteins to modulate function or protein-protein interactions. SUMO in particular, was shown to act as a molecular glue when DNA damage occurs, facilitating the assembly of large protein complexes in repair foci. In other instances, SUMOylation alters a protein's biochemical activities, and interactions. SUMO-targeted ubiquitin ligases (STUbLs) are enzymes that target SUMOylated proteins for ubiquitylation and subsequent degradation, providing a function for the SUMO modification in the regulation and disassembly of repair complexes. Here, we discuss the major contributions of SUMO and STUbLs in the regulation of DNA damage repair pathways as well as in the maintenance of critical regions of the genome, namely rDNA regions, telomeres and the 2 μm circle in budding yeast.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28115630 PMCID: PMC5389695 DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkw1369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleic Acids Res ISSN: 0305-1048 Impact factor: 16.971
Figure 1.The SUMOylation process. It involves four steps; (A) Processing of small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) by Ulp1 SUMO protease to expose a C-terminal di-glycine residue. (B) Activation; Aos1-Uba2 E1 activating enzyme uses the energy of ATP to form a SUMO-adenylyl intermediate followed by the conjugation of SUMO to a cysteine in E1 and the release of AMP. (C) Conjugation; Ubc9 E2 SUMO conjugating enzyme catalyze the transfer of SUMO from E1 to the active site cysteine of E2. (D) Ligation; Ubc9 or SUMO E3 ligases catalyzes the transfer of SUMO to the substrate through an isopeptide bond between a substrate lysine and the C-terminal glycine of SUMO. (E) Multiple rounds; the poly-SUMOylation process involves multiple rounds of SUMOylation onto one of the lysines on SUMO itself.
Figure 2.SUMO involvement in DNA repair pathways. (A) Base excision repair (BER); several DNA N-glycosylases were shown to be SUMOylated upon DNA damage, such as Ogg1, Ntg1, Ntg2 and Mag1, as well as the AP endonuclease, Apn1. (B) Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER); several NER proteins were found to be SUMOylated upon UV irradiation, such as Rad16, Rad7 and Rad4, as well as NER proteins that are also involved in other repair pathways, such as Rad1, Rad10, Rpb4 and Rad3. (C) Post-replication repair (PRR), in case a lesion is encountered by the DNA replication machinery, it can be bypassed by one of two sub-pathways, translesion synthesis (TLS) and template switching (TS). SUMO-PCNA acts as a prerequisite for template switching. Proteins involved in the resolution of sister chromatid junctions (SCJs), an intermediate in, T.S., were also shown to be SUMOylated, such as Smc5 and Sgs1. (D) DSB repair (DSB repair), proteins of the homologous recombination (HR) sub-pathway have been shown to be SUMOylated upon damage, such as RPA subunits, Rfa1 and Rfa2, MRX complex, Rad52, Rad59, Srs2, Sae2. This is in addition to non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) proteins, Yku70-Yku80 and Lif1. Table 1 lists the effects of the SUMOylation of the repair factors that were analyzed in some detail.
The major SUMOylated proteins involved in DNA repair*
| Substrate | Position | E3 | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ntg1 | K364 | Nuclear localization of Ntg1 upon oxidative damage ( | |
| Rad4 | Siz2 | Possibly promotes Rad4 functions as it accumulates in absence of downstream NER proteins ( | |
| Rad1 | K32 | Siz1, Siz2 | Decreases Rad1 binding, facilitating its dissociation from DNA post-cleavage ( |
| PCNA | K164 | Siz1 ( | Enhances interaction with Rad18 through SIM. Allows the switch to the ubiquitin modification and activation of damage avoidance pathways ( |
| Allows interaction with Srs2, to inhibit the extension of the D-loop thus limiting crossovers ( | |||
| Mediates interaction with Elg1 subunit of alternative clamp loader leading to its unloading from DNA after completion of replication ( | |||
| K127 | Siz2 ( | Deters PCNA interactions as this modification with PIP box containing proteins, such as Eco1 and Rfc1, as it occurs at the interdomain connecting loop ( | |
| Smc5 | Mms21 | Promotes the function of Smc5/6 complex in resolving X-shaped structures from TS events ( | |
| Rad52 | K43, K44 and K253 (or K10, K11 and K220) ( | Siz2 ( | Promotes Rad52 stability ( |
| Srs2 | K1081, K1089 and K1142 | Siz1, Siz2 | Important for the interaction with Rad51 through Rad51 C-terminal SIMs. SUMO-Srs2 increases recombination at rDNA regions ( |
| Sae2 | K97 | Siz1, Siz2 | Facilitates Sae2 processing of complex DSBs and increase its solubility ( |
| Mre11-Rad50-Xrs2 (MRX) | Enhances its resection activity and directs repair to HR ( | ||
| Yku70 | K588, K591, K592, K596 and K597 | Enhances DNA binding ( | |
| Lif1 | K301 | Siz1, Siz2 | Decreases ssDNA binding and self-association. Inhibits NHEJ at persistent DSBs ( |
| Top2 | Siz1, Siz2 | Localizes at the rDNA loci ( | |
| Smc1, Smc3 (Cohesin) Smc2 (Condensin) | Mms21 | Binding to 5S rDNA region ( | |
| Cdc13 | K909 | Siz1, Siz2 | Inhibits telomerase mediated lengthening and mediates interaction with Stn1 ( |
| Rap1 | K240 and K246 | Decreases NHEJ inhibition activity of Rap1. Targets it for ubiquitin mediated degradation by STUbL Uls1 ( | |
| Sgs1 | K621 | Siz1, Siz2 | Promotes alternative lengthening of telomeres in telomerase-deficient cells by promoting telomere-telomere recombination ( |
| Flp1 | K375 | Siz1, Siz2 | Limits the Flp1-dependent DNA damage on the 2 μm plasmid and the HR-dependent repair that results in hyperamplification of the 2 μm plasmid and eventually clonal lethality. The SUMO modification possibly targets Flp1 for Slx5-Slx8- dependent ubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation ( |
| Rep1 | K305, K315 and K328 | Allows proper association with | |
| Rep2 | Several sites which may include: K42, K44, K92, K124, K130, K134, K146, K148, K149, K177, K208, K226 or K227. | Allows proper association with | |
*The list is not comprehensive and only presents examples where individual modifications have been analyzed in some detail.
Figure 3.SUMO as a regulator of PCNA ubiquitylation and repair pathway choice. (1) SUMOylation on K164 by Siz1 or K127 by Siz2 mediates interaction with Rad18 through Rad18 SIM, thus switching to the ubiquitin modification upon DNA damage. (2) SUMOylation of PCNA also serves to recruit Srs2, leading to inhibition of Polδ/η limiting D-loop extension and crossovers. (3) SUMOylation of PCNA also facilitates its interaction with Elg1 alternative clamp loader, to unload PCNA from DNA upon completion of DNA synthesis. (4) K63 linked poly-ubiquitylation on K164 is mediated by Mms2-Ubc13/Rad5 and requires the prior mono-ubiquitylation by Rad6/Rad18. It results in template switching through either fork regression or SCJs. (5) Ubiquitylation of K164 of PCNA is mediated by Rad6/Rad18 and leads to translesion synthesis by recruiting TLS polymerases to the damage site.
Figure 4.Role of SUMO and STUbLs in nuclear sub-compartmentalization of DNA damage. (A) Persistent DSBs are translocated to the nuclear envelope in S/G2 phase, depending on mono-SUMOylation by Mms21 subunit of Smc5/6 complex, recruitment of SUMO-H2AZ, Rad51 and telomere proteins Cdc13 and Yku70-Yku80. This results in inhibition of recombination and possibly de novo telomere addition. Translocation to nuclear pores can occur in G1 phase depending on poly-SUMOylation requiring the sequential activity of Mms21 and Siz2. (B) Difficult to replicate repeat regions are translocated to the nuclear pores. The localization of Slx5-Slx8 at nuclear pores allows the ubiquitin dependent degradation of SUMOylated Rad52, thus serving to inhibit recombination at these stalled replication forks. (C) Telomere anchoring at the nuclear envelope inhibits recombination and requires the SUMOylation of the telomere associated proteins Cdc13, Yku70-Yku80 and the Sir complex. Smc5/6 complex is also required for telomere clustering. The SUMOylation of Sgs1 in telomerase-deficient cells translocates the telomeres to the nuclear pores, where alternative lengthening of telomeres by recombination can occur. (D) The highly repeat rich rDNA is located in the nucleolus sub-compartment. SUMOylation of Rad52 is required for its exclusion from the nucleolus, which is essential for inhibiting recombination at these regions. A DSB induced at rDNA requires its translocation outside of the nuclear sub-compartment to be repaired by the nuclear Rad52 pool.