Literature DB >> 31645724

Stabilization of chromatin topology safeguards genome integrity.

Fena Ochs1, Gopal Karemore1,2, Ezequiel Miron3,4, Jill Brown5, Hana Sedlackova1, Maj-Britt Rask1, Marko Lampe6, Veronica Buckle5, Lothar Schermelleh7, Jiri Lukas8, Claudia Lukas1.   

Abstract

To safeguard genome integrity in response to DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), mammalian cells mobilize the neighbouring chromatin to shield DNA ends against excessive resection that could undermine repair fidelity and cause damage to healthy chromosomes1. This form of genome surveillance is orchestrated by 53BP1, whose accumulation at DSBs triggers sequential recruitment of RIF1 and the shieldin-CST-POLα complex2. How this pathway reflects and influences the three-dimensional nuclear architecture is not known. Here we use super-resolution microscopy to show that 53BP1 and RIF1 form an autonomous functional module that stabilizes three-dimensional chromatin topology at sites of DNA breakage. This process is initiated by accumulation of 53BP1 at regions of compact chromatin that colocalize with topologically associating domain (TAD) sequences, followed by recruitment of RIF1 to the boundaries between such domains. The alternating distribution of 53BP1 and RIF1 stabilizes several neighbouring TAD-sized structures at a single DBS site into an ordered, circular arrangement. Depletion of 53BP1 or RIF1 (but not shieldin) disrupts this arrangement and leads to decompaction of DSB-flanking chromatin, reduction in interchromatin space, aberrant spreading of DNA repair proteins, and hyper-resection of DNA ends. Similar topological distortions are triggered by depletion of cohesin, which suggests that the maintenance of chromatin structure after DNA breakage involves basic mechanisms that shape three-dimensional nuclear organization. As topological stabilization of DSB-flanking chromatin is independent of DNA repair, we propose that, besides providing a structural scaffold to protect DNA ends against aberrant processing, 53BP1 and RIF1 safeguard epigenetic integrity at loci that are disrupted by DNA breakage.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31645724     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1659-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  1 in total

1.  Fiji: an open-source platform for biological-image analysis.

Authors:  Johannes Schindelin; Ignacio Arganda-Carreras; Erwin Frise; Verena Kaynig; Mark Longair; Tobias Pietzsch; Stephan Preibisch; Curtis Rueden; Stephan Saalfeld; Benjamin Schmid; Jean-Yves Tinevez; Daniel James White; Volker Hartenstein; Kevin Eliceiri; Pavel Tomancak; Albert Cardona
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2012-06-28       Impact factor: 28.547

  1 in total
  49 in total

Review 1.  The molecular basis and disease relevance of non-homologous DNA end joining.

Authors:  Bailin Zhao; Eli Rothenberg; Dale A Ramsden; Michael R Lieber
Journal:  Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2020-10-19       Impact factor: 94.444

2.  Replication Labeling Methods for Super-Resolution Imaging of Chromosome Territories and Chromatin Domains.

Authors:  Ezequiel Miron; Joseph Windo; Fena Ochs; Lothar Schermelleh
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2022

3.  A reappraisal of the form - function problem. Theory and phenomenology.

Authors:  Luciano Boi
Journal:  Theory Biosci       Date:  2022-04-26       Impact factor: 1.919

4.  RIF1 acts in DNA repair through phosphopeptide recognition of 53BP1.

Authors:  Dheva Setiaputra; Cristina Escribano-Díaz; Julia K Reinert; Pooja Sadana; Dali Zong; Elsa Callen; Chérine Sifri; Jan Seebacher; André Nussenzweig; Nicolas H Thomä; Daniel Durocher
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2022-02-24       Impact factor: 17.970

Review 5.  RASER-FISH: non-denaturing fluorescence in situ hybridization for preservation of three-dimensional interphase chromatin structure.

Authors:  Jill M Brown; Sara De Ornellas; Eva Parisi; Lothar Schermelleh; Veronica J Buckle
Journal:  Nat Protoc       Date:  2022-04-04       Impact factor: 13.491

6.  SHLD1 is dispensable for 53BP1-dependent V(D)J recombination but critical for productive class switch recombination.

Authors:  Estelle Vincendeau; Wenming Wei; Xuefei Zhang; Cyril Planchais; Wei Yu; Hélène Lenden-Hasse; Thomas Cokelaer; Juliana Pipoli da Fonseca; Hugo Mouquet; David J Adams; Frederick W Alt; Stephen P Jackson; Gabriel Balmus; Chloé Lescale; Ludovic Deriano
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-06-28       Impact factor: 17.694

Review 7.  Structural variations in cancer and the 3D genome.

Authors:  Frank Dubois; Nikos Sidiropoulos; Joachim Weischenfeldt; Rameen Beroukhim
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2022-06-28       Impact factor: 69.800

Review 8.  The multiple facets of the SMC1A gene.

Authors:  Antonio Musio
Journal:  Gene       Date:  2020-03-25       Impact factor: 3.688

9.  Cas9 deactivation with photocleavable guide RNAs.

Authors:  Roger S Zou; Yang Liu; Bin Wu; Taekjip Ha
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2021-03-03       Impact factor: 17.970

10.  The dystonia gene THAP1 controls DNA double-strand break repair choice.

Authors:  Kenta Shinoda; Dali Zong; Elsa Callen; Wei Wu; Lavinia C Dumitrache; Frida Belinky; Raj Chari; Nancy Wong; Momoko Ishikawa; Andre Stanlie; Trisha Multhaupt-Buell; Nutan Sharma; Laurie Ozelius; Michelle Ehrlich; Peter J McKinnon; André Nussenzweig
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2021-04-14       Impact factor: 19.328

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