Structural and functional basis of inositol hexaphosphate stimulation of NHEJ through stabilization of Ku-XLF interaction

Archive ouverte

Kefala Stavridi, Antonia | Gontier, Amandine | Morin, Vincent | Frit, Philippe | Ropars, Virginie | Barboule, Nadia | Racca, Carine | Jonchhe, Sagun | Morten, Michael J | Andreani, Jessica | Rak, Alexey | Legrand, Pierre | Bourand-Plantefol, Alexa | Hardwick, Steven W | Chirgadze, Dimitri Y | Davey, Paul | de Oliveira, Taiana Maia | Rothenberg, Eli | Britton, Sebastien | Calsou, Patrick | Blundell, Tom L | Varela, Paloma F | Chaplin, Amanda K | Charbonnier, Jean-Baptiste

Edité par CCSD ; Oxford University Press -

International audience. The classical Non-Homologous End Joining (c-NHEJ) pathway is the predominant process in mammals for repairing endogenous, accidental or programmed DNA Double-Strand Breaks. c-NHEJ is regulated by several accessory factors, post-translational modifications, endogenous chemical agents and metabolites. The metabolite inositol-hexaphosphate (IP6) stimulates c-NHEJ by interacting with the Ku70–Ku80 heterodimer (Ku). We report cryo-EM structures of apo- and DNA-bound Ku in complex with IP6, at 3.5 Å and 2.74 Å resolutions respectively, and an X-ray crystallography structure of a Ku in complex with DNA and IP6 at 3.7 Å. The Ku-IP6 interaction is mediated predominantly via salt bridges at the interface of the Ku70 and Ku80 subunits. This interaction is distant from the DNA, DNA-PKcs, APLF and PAXX binding sites and in close proximity to XLF binding site. Biophysical experiments show that IP6 binding increases the thermal stability of Ku by 2°C in a DNA-dependent manner, stabilizes Ku on DNA and enhances XLF affinity for Ku. In cells, selected mutagenesis of the IP6 binding pocket reduces both Ku accrual at damaged sites and XLF enrolment in the NHEJ complex, which translate into a lower end-joining efficiency. Thus, this study defines the molecular bases of the IP6 metabolite stimulatory effect on the c-NHEJ repair activity.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

PAXX binding to the NHEJ machinery explains functional redundancy with XLF

Archive ouverte | Seif-El-Dahan, Murielle | CCSD

International audience. Nonhomologous end joining is a critical mechanism that repairs DNA double-strand breaks in human cells. In this work, we address the structural and functional role of the accessory protein PA...

XLF and APLF bind Ku80 at two remote sites to ensure DNA repair by non-homologous end joining

Archive ouverte | Nemoz, Clément | CCSD

International audience. The Ku70-Ku80 (Ku) heterodimer binds rapidly and tightly to the ends of DNA double-strand breaks and recruits factors of the non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) repair pathway through molecular...

DNA polymerase Lambda is anchored within the NHEJ synaptic complex via Ku70/80

Archive ouverte | Frit, Philippe | CCSD

International audience. Abstract Non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) is the predominant pathway by which double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) are repaired in mammals. To enable final break closure, various NHEJ end-process...

Chargement des enrichissements...