4.8 Article

Mammalian Exo1 encodes both structural and catalytic functions that play distinct roles in essential biological processes

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1308512110

Keywords

somatic hypermuation; scaffold function; ssDNA

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [CA72649, CA102705, CA76329, CA93484]
  2. Division of Intramural Research of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIH [Z01 ES065089]
  3. National Cancer Institute [P30CA013330]
  4. National Women's Division of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine
  5. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SCHA 1557/1-1]

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Mammalian Exonuclease 1 (EXO1) is an evolutionarily conserved, multifunctional exonuclease involved in DNA damage repair, replication, immunoglobulin diversity, meiosis, and telomere maintenance. It has been assumed that EXO1 participates in these processes primarily through its exonuclease activity, but recent studies also suggest that EXO1 has a structural function in the assembly of higher-order protein complexes. To dissect the enzymatic and nonenzymatic roles of EXO1 in the different biological processes in vivo, we generated an EXO1-E109K knockin (Exo1(EK)) mouse expressing a stable exonuclease-deficient protein and, for comparison, a fully EXO1-deficient (Exo1(null)) mouse. In contrast to Exo1(null/null) mice, Exo1(EK/EK) mice retained mismatch repair activity and displayed normal class switch recombination and meiosis. However, both Exo1-mutant lines showed defects in DNA damage response including DNA double-strand break repair (DSBR) through DNA end resection, chromosomal stability, and tumor suppression, indicating that the enzymatic function is required for those processes. On a transformation-related protein 53 (Trp53)-null background, the DSBR defect caused by the E109K mutation altered the tumor spectrum but did not affect the overall survival as compared with p53-Exo1(null) mice, whose defects in both DSBR and mismatch repair also compromised survival. The separation of these functions demonstrates the differential requirement for the structural function and nuclease activity of mammalian EXO1 in distinct DNA repair processes and tumorigenesis in vivo.

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