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Opposing ISWI- and CHD-class chromatin remodeling activities orchestrate heterochromatic DNA repair.

The Journal of cell biology (2014-12-24)
Karolin Klement, Martijn S Luijsterburg, Jordan B Pinder, Chad S Cena, Victor Del Nero, Christopher M Wintersinger, Graham Dellaire, Haico van Attikum, Aaron A Goodarzi
RESUMEN

Heterochromatin is a barrier to DNA repair that correlates strongly with elevated somatic mutation in cancer. CHD class II nucleosome remodeling activity (specifically CHD3.1) retained by KAP-1 increases heterochromatin compaction and impedes DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair requiring Artemis. This obstruction is alleviated by chromatin relaxation via ATM-dependent KAP-1S824 phosphorylation (pKAP-1) and CHD3.1 dispersal from heterochromatic DSBs; however, how heterochromatin compaction is actually adjusted after CHD3.1 dispersal is unknown. In this paper, we demonstrate that Artemis-dependent DSB repair in heterochromatin requires ISWI (imitation switch)-class ACF1-SNF2H nucleosome remodeling. Compacted chromatin generated by CHD3.1 after DNA replication necessitates ACF1-SNF2H-mediated relaxation for DSB repair. ACF1-SNF2H requires RNF20 to bind heterochromatic DSBs, underlies RNF20-mediated chromatin relaxation, and functions downstream of pKAP-1-mediated CHD3.1 dispersal to enable DSB repair. CHD3.1 and ACF1-SNF2H display counteractive activities but similar histone affinities (via the plant homeodomains of CHD3.1 and ACF1), which we suggest necessitates a two-step dispersal and recruitment system regulating these opposing chromatin remodeling activities during DSB repair.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Anticuerpo anti-HA, monoclonal de ratón antibody produced in mouse, clone HA-7, purified from hybridoma cell culture
Sigma-Aldrich
Adenosine 5′-Triphosphatase from porcine cerebral cortex, lyophilized powder, ≥0.3 units/mg protein, pH 7.8