4.8 Article

BRCA1 controls homologous recombination at Tus/Ter-stalled mammalian replication forks

Journal

NATURE
Volume 510, Issue 7506, Pages 556-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature13295

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01CA095175, R01GM073894, R21CA144017, R37GM26938]
  2. NIH/NCI [5T32CA081156]
  3. ACS [PF-12-248-01-DMC]

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Replication fork stalling can promote genomic instability, predisposing to cancer and other diseases(1-3). Stalled replication forks may be processed by sister chromatid recombination (SCR), generating error-free or error-prone homologous recombination (HR) outcomes(4-8). In mammalian cells, a long-standing hypothesis proposes that the major hereditary breast/ovarian cancer predisposition gene products, BRCA1 and BRCA2, control HR/SCR at stalled replication forks(9). Although BRCA1 and BRCA2 affect replication fork processing(10-12), direct evidence that BRCA gene products regulate homologous recombination at stalled chromosomal replication forks is lacking, due to a dearth of tools for studying this process. Here we report that the Escherichia coli Tus/Ter complex(13-16) can be engineered to induce site-specific replication fork stalling and chromosomal HR/SCR in mouse cells. Tus/Ter-induced homologous recombination entails processing of bidirectionally arrested forks. We find that the Brca1 carboxy (C)-terminal tandem BRCT repeat and regions of Brca1 encoded by exon 11-two Brca1 elements implicated in tumour suppression-control Tus/Ter-induced homologous recombination. Inactivation of either Brca1 or Brca2 increases the absolute frequency of 'long-tract' gene conversions at Tus/Ter-stalled forks, an outcome not observed in response to a site-specific endonuclease-mediated chromosomal double-strand break. Therefore, homologous recombination at stalled forks is regulated differently from homologous recombination at double-strand breaks arising independently of a replication fork. We propose that aberrant long-tract homologous recombination at stalled replication forks contributes to genomic instability and breast/ovarian cancer predisposition in BRCA mutant cells.

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