4.6 Article

ATRX proximal protein associations boast roles beyond histone deposition

Journal

PLOS GENETICS
Volume 17, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1009909

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [PJT-159683]
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN-2016-05559]
  3. Cancer Research Society (CRS)
  4. Garron Family Cancer Centre (GFCC)
  5. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)
  6. Genome Canada
  7. Ontario Genomics [OGI-139]
  8. CIHR
  9. NSERC
  10. University of Birmingham [C17422/A25154]
  11. CR-UK [C17422/A25154, C17183/A23303]

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ATRX is a key protein involved in organizing repetitive DNA regions and has additional functions such as compacting DNA, promoting stability, and suppressing spurious DNA exchanges at telomeres. ATRX interacts with various proteins to carry out its functions and proteomic changes occur at telomeres when ATRX is deleted, affecting the abundance of chromatin remodeling, DNA replication, and DNA repair factors. This study expands the understanding of ATRX-associating proteins and their diverse functions.
Author summaryATRX is a protein that is needed to keep repetitive DNA regions organized. It does so in part by binding the DAXX histone chaperone to deposit histone proteins on DNA and assemble structures known as nucleosomes. While important, ATRX has additional functions that remain understudied. To better understand its various biological roles, we first identified the other proteins that are found in its proximity. ATRX-associating proteins were implicated in a range of functions, in addition to histone deposition. Our results suggest that ATRX-associating proteins likely help compact DNA after it is assembled into nucleosomes, and also promote its stability.We then examined the effect of ATRX on telomeres (repetitive DNA regions at the end of chromosomes). ATRX and at least one of its associating proteins suppressed spurious DNA exchanges at telomeres. To understand why, we then identified proteomic changes that occur at telomeres when ATRX was deleted. Loss of ATRX altered the enrichment of a surprising number of proteins at telomeres, including several DNA damage response and chromatin remodelling proteins. The ATRX ATP-dependent chromatin remodelling/helicase protein associates with the DAXX histone chaperone to deposit histone H3.3 over repetitive DNA regions. Because ATRX-protein interactions impart functions, such as histone deposition, we used proximity-dependent biotinylation (BioID) to identify proximal associations for ATRX. The proteomic screen captured known interactors, such as DAXX, NBS1, and PML, but also identified a range of new associating proteins. To gauge the scope of their roles, we examined three novel ATRX-associating proteins that likely differed in function, and for which little data were available. We found CCDC71 to associate with ATRX, but also HP1 and NAP1, suggesting a role in chromatin maintenance. Contrastingly, FAM207A associated with proteins involved in ribosome biosynthesis and localized to the nucleolus. ATRX proximal associations with the SLF2 DNA damage response factor help inhibit telomere exchanges. We further screened for the proteomic changes at telomeres when ATRX, SLF2, or both proteins were deleted. The loss caused important changes in the abundance of chromatin remodelling, DNA replication, and DNA repair factors at telomeres. Interestingly, several of these have previously been implicated in alternative lengthening of telomeres. Altogether, this study expands the repertoire of ATRX-associating proteins and functions.

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