4.8 Article

FAM35A associates with REV7 and modulates DNAdamage responses of normal and BRCA1-defective cells

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 37, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embj.201899543

Keywords

camptothecin; cisplatin; DNA repair; olaparib; prostate cancer

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [CA132840, CA097175, CA193124, CA212556]
  2. Grady F. Saunders Ph.D. Distinguished Research Professorship
  3. Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas [RP130297]
  4. University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Institutional Research Grant
  5. Center for Radiation Oncology Research
  6. CPRIT Core Facility Support grant [RP120348, RP170002]
  7. NIH Cancer Center Support Grant [P30CA016672]
  8. CPRIT grant [RP110782]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

To exploit vulnerabilities of tumors, it is urgent to identify associated defects in genome maintenance. One unsolved problem is the mechanism of regulation of DNA double-strand break repair by REV7 in complex with 53BP1 and RIF1, and its influence on repair pathway choice between homologous recombination and non-homologous end-joining. We searched for REV7-associated factors in human cells and found FAM35A, a previously unstudied protein with an unstructured N-terminal region and a C-terminal region harboring three OB-fold domains similar to single-stranded DNA-binding protein RPA, as novel interactor of REV7/RIF1/53BP1. FAM35A re-localized in damaged cell nuclei, and its knockdown caused sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents. In a BRCA1-mutant cell line, however, depletion of FAM35A increased resistance to camptothecin, suggesting that FAM35A participates in processing of DNA ends to allow more efficient DNA repair. We found FAM35A absent in one widely used BRCA1-mutant cancer cell line (HCC1937) with anomalous resistance to PARP inhibitors. A survey of FAM35A alterations revealed that the gene is altered at the highest frequency in prostate cancers (up to 13%) and significantly less expressed in metastatic cases, revealing promise for FAM35A as a therapeutically relevant cancer marker.

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