4.7 Article

Wwox Binding to the Murine Brca1-BRCT Domain Regulates Timing of Brip1 and CtIP Phospho-Protein Interactions with This Domain at DNA Double-Strand Breaks, and Repair Pathway Choice

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23073729

Keywords

end-resection at DSBs; Wwox deficiency; Chk2 inhibition; IR and platinum treatment resistance

Funding

  1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1TR002733]
  2. Pelotonia postdoctoral Candidate Fellowship
  3. Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Specialized Center of Research award [7016-18]
  4. FA18 Spielman IRP
  5. Pelotonia IRP 2018-2020
  6. National Cancer Institute [T32-CA09503]
  7. DoD Breast Cancer Research Program [BC083089]
  8. CDMRP [544554, BC083089] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Wwox-deficient cells in both humans and mice exhibit elevated homologous recombination. The binding of human Wwox to Brca1 inhibits its phosphorylation, while the binding of murine Wwox to Brca1 affects the DNA break repair pathway through the activation of related proteins. The restoration of sensitivity to ionizing radiation and platinum drugs in Wwox-deficient cells is crucial for cancer treatment research.
Wwox-deficient human cells show elevated homologous recombination, leading to resistance to killing by double-strand break-inducing agents. Human Wwox binds to the Brca1 981-PPLF-984 Wwox-binding motif, likely blocking the pChk2 phosphorylation site at Brca1-S988. This phosphorylation site is conserved across mammalian species; the PPLF motif is conserved in primates but not in rodents. We now show that murine Wwox does not bind Brca1 near the conserved mouse Brca1 phospho-S971 site, leaving it open for Chk2 phosphorylation and Brca1 activation. Instead, murine Wwox binds to Brca1 through its BRCT domain, where pAbraxas, pBrip1, and pCtIP, of the A, B, and C binding complexes, interact to regulate double-strand break repair pathway response. In Wwox-deficient mouse cells, the Brca1-BRCT domain is thus accessible for immediate binding of these phospho-proteins. We confirm elevated homologous recombination in Wwox-silenced murine cells, as in human cells. Wwox-deficient murine cells showed increased ionizing radiation-induced Abraxas, Brca1, and CtIP foci and long resected single-strand DNA, early after ionizing radiation. Wwox deletion increased the basal level of Brca1-CtIP interaction and the expression level of the MRN-CtIP protein complex, key players in end-resection, and facilitated Brca1 release from foci. Inhibition of phospho-Chk2 phosphorylation of Brca1-S971 delays the end-resection; the delay of premature end-resection by combining Chk2 inhibition with ionizing radiation or carboplatin treatment restored ionizing radiation and platinum sensitivity in Wwox-deficient murine cells, as in human cells, supporting the use of murine in vitro and in vivo models in preclinical cancer treatment research.

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