4.8 Article

UV-sensitive syndrome protein UVSSA recruits USP7 to regulate transcription-coupled repair

Journal

NATURE GENETICS
Volume 44, Issue 5, Pages 598-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ng.2230

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Netherlands Genomics Initiative NPCII [935.19.021, 935.11.042]
  2. Dutch Organization for Scientific Research ZonMW [917.96.120]
  3. TOP [912.08.031]
  4. Association for International Cancer Research [10-594]
  5. Cancer Genomics Centre
  6. ERC
  7. [FP7-PIEF-GA-2009-253544]

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Transcription-coupled nucleotide-excision repair (TC-NER) is a subpathway of NER that efficiently removes the highly toxic RNA polymerase II blocking lesions in DNA. Defective TC-NER gives rise to the human disorders Cockayne syndrome and UV-sensitive syndrome (UVSS)(1). NER initiating factors are known to be regulated by ubiquitination(2). Using a SILAC-based proteomic approach, we identified UVSSA (formerly known as KIAA1530) as part of a UV-induced ubiquitinated protein complex. Knockdown of UVSSA resulted in TC-NER deficiency. UVSSA was found to be the causative gene for UVSS, an unresolved NER deficiency disorder(3). The UVSSA protein interacts with elongating RNA polymerase II, localizes specifically to UV-induced lesions, resides in chromatin-associated TC-NER complexes and is implicated in stabilizing the TC-NER master organizing protein ERCC6 (also known as CSB) by delivering the deubiquitinating enzyme USP7 to TC-NER complexes. Together, these findings indicate that UVSSA-USP7-mediated stabilization of ERCC6 represents a critical regulatory mechanism of TC-NER in restoring gene expression.

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