4.5 Article

p97 Promotes a Conserved Mechanism of Helicase Unloading during DNA Cross-Link Repair

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 23, Pages 2983-2994

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MCB.00434-16

Keywords

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Funding

  1. South Carolina Clinical and Translational Research Institute [TL1 TR001451 UL1 TR001450]
  2. HHS \ NIH \ National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) [R00GM102325, R35GM119512]

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Interstrand cross-links (ICLs) are extremely toxic DNA lesions that create an impassable roadblock to DNA replication. When a replication fork collides with an ICL, it triggers a damage response that promotes multiple DNA processing events required to excise the cross-link from chromatin and resolve the stalled replication fork. One of the first steps in this process involves displacement of the CMG replicative helicase (comprised of Cdc45, MCM2-7, and GINS), which obstructs the underlying crosslink. Here we report that the p97/Cdc48/VCP segregase plays a critical role in ICL repair by unloading the CMG complex from chromatin. Eviction of the stalled helicase involves K48-linked polyubiquitylation of MCM7, p97-mediated extraction of CMG, and a largely degradation-independent mechanism of MCM7 deubiquitylation. Our results show that ICL repair and replication termination both utilize a similar mechanism to displace the CMG complex from chromatin. However, unlike termination, repair-mediated helicase unloading involves the tumor suppressor protein BRCA1, which acts upstream of MCM7 ubiquitylation and p97 recruitment. Together, these findings indicate that p97 plays a conserved role in dismantling the CMG helicase complex during different cellular events, but that distinct regulatory signals ultimately control when and where unloading takes place.

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