4.8 Article

Mrc1 and Tof1 prevent fragility and instability at long CAG repeats by their fork stabilizing function

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 47, Issue 2, Pages 794-805

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gky1195

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [GM063066, GM122880, GM105473, GM60987]
  2. Tufts University faculty award
  3. NIH [GM122880]

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Fork stabilization at DNA impediments is key to maintaining replication fork integrity and preventing chromosome breaks. Mrc1 and Tof1 are two known stabilizers that travel with the replication fork. In addition to a structural role, Mrc1 has a DNA damage checkpoint function. Using a yeast model system, we analyzed the role of Mrc1 and Tof1 at expanded CAG repeats of medium and long lengths, which are known to stall replication forks and cause trinucleotide expansion diseases such as Huntington's disease and myotonic dystrophy. We demonstrate that the fork stabilizer but not the checkpoint activation function of Mrc1 is key for preventing DNA breakage and death of cells containing expanded CAG tracts. In contrast, both Mrc1 functions are important in preventing repeat length instability. Mrc1 has a general fork protector role that is evident at forks traversing both repetitive and non-repetitive DNA, though it becomes crucial at long CAG repeat lengths. In contrast, the role of Tof1 in preventing fork breakage is specific to long CAG tracts of 85 or more repeats. Our results indicate that long CAG repeats have a particular need for Tof1 and highlight the importance of fork stabilizers in maintaining fork integrity during replication of structure-forming repeats.

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