4.8 Article

RADX prevents genome instability by confining replication fork reversal to stalled forks

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 81, Issue 14, Pages 3007-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2021.05.014

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01GM116616]
  2. National Cancer Institute (NCI) [R01CA237263, R01CA248526]
  3. Breast Cancer Research Foundation
  4. EMB Core of grant [P01CA092584]

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RAD51 facilitates replication fork reversal and RADX can either inhibit or promote fork reversal depending on replication stress levels. RADX interacts directly with RAD51 and single-strand DNA to confine fork reversal to persistently stalled forks, preventing genome instability.
RAD51 facilitates replication fork reversal and protects reversed forks from nuclease degradation. Although potentially a useful replication stress response mechanism, unregulated fork reversal can cause genome instability. Here we show that RADX, a single-strand DNA binding protein that binds to and destabilizes RAD51 nucleofilaments, can either inhibit or promote fork reversal depending on replication stress levels. RADX inhibits fork reversal at elongating forks, thereby preventing fork slowing and collapse. Paradoxically, in the presence of persistent replication stress, RADX localizes to stalled forks to generate reversed fork structures. Consequently, inactivating RADX prevents fork-reversal-dependent telomere dysfunction in the absence of RTEL1 and blocks nascent strand degradation when fork protection factors are inactivated. Addition of RADX increases SMARCAL1-dependent fork reversal in conditions in which pre-binding RAD51 to a model fork substrate is inhibitory. Thus, RADX directly interacts with RAD51 and single-strand DNA to confine fork reversal to persistently stalled forks.

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