A R-loop sensing pathway mediates the relocation of transcribed genes to nuclear pore complexes

Archive ouverte

Penzo, Arianna | Dubarry, Marion | Brocas, Clémentine | Zheng, Myriam | Mangione, Raphaël, M | Rougemaille, Mathieu | Goncalves, Coralie | Lautier, Ophélie | Libri, Domenico | Simon, Marie-Noëlle | Géli, Vincent | Dubrana, Karine | Palancade, Benoit

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) have increasingly recognized interactions with the genome, as exemplified in yeast, where they bind transcribed or damaged chromatin. By combining genome-wide approaches with live imaging of model loci, we uncover a correlation between NPC association and the accumulation of R-loops, which are genotoxic structures formed through hybridization of nascent RNAs with their DNA templates. Manipulating hybrid formation demonstrates that R-loop accumulation per se, rather than transcription or R-loop-dependent damages, is the primary trigger for relocation to NPCs. Mechanistically, R-loop-dependent repositioning involves their recognition by the ssDNA-binding protein RPA, and SUMO-dependent interactions with NPC-associated factors. Preventing R-loop-dependent relocation leads to lethality in hybrid-accumulating conditions, while NPC tethering of a model hybrid-prone locus attenuates R-loop-dependent genetic instability. Remarkably, this relocation pathway involves molecular factors similar to those required for the association of stalled replication forks with NPCs, supporting the existence of convergent mechanisms for sensing transcriptional and genotoxic stresses.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

On the edge: how nuclear pore complexes rule genome stability

Archive ouverte | Simon, Marie-Noëlle | CCSD

International audience. Nuclear organization has emerged as a critical layer in the coordination of DNA repair activities. Distinct types of DNA lesions have notably been shown to relocate at the vicinity of nuclear...

Telomeric C‐circles localize at nuclear pore complexes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Sciences de la vie

Archive ouverte | Aguilera, Paula | CCSD

International audience. As in human cells, yeast telomeres can be maintained in cells lacking telomerase activity by recombination-based mechanisms known as ALT (Alternative Lengthening of Telomeres). A hallmark of ...

NPCs and APBs: two HUBs of non-canonical homology-based recombination at telomeres?

Archive ouverte | Aguilera, Paula | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...