4.8 Article

HSF2BP negatively regulates homologous recombination in DNA interstrand crosslink repair

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 48, Issue 5, Pages 2442-2456

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkz1219

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  2. Mochida Memorial Foundation for Medical and Pharmaceutical Research
  3. JSPS Postdoctoral Fellowship
  4. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [VIDI 700.10.421]
  5. Dutch Cancer Society [KWF HUBR 2015-7736, EMCR 2008-4045]
  6. European Community [HEALTHF2-2010-259893]
  7. Dutch Cancer Society

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The tumor suppressor BRCA2 is essential for homologous recombination (HR), replication fork stability and DNA interstrand crosslink (ICL) repair in vertebrates. We show that ectopic production of HSF2BP, a BRCA2-interacting protein required for meiotic HR during mouse spermatogenesis, in non-germline human cells acutely sensitize them to ICL-inducing agents (mitomycin C and cisplatin) and PARP inhibitors, resulting in a phenotype characteristic of cells from Fanconi anemia (FA) patients. We biochemically recapitulate the suppression of JCL repair and establish that excess HSF2BP compromises HR by triggering the removal of BRCA2 from the ICL site and thereby preventing the loading of RAD51. This establishes ectopic expression of a wild-type meiotic protein in the absence of any other prote-incoding mutations as a new mechanism that can lead to an FA-like cellular phenotype. Naturally occurring elevated production of HSF2BP in tumors may be a source of cancer-promoting genomic instability and also a targetable vulnerability.

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