Control of the Activity of the MRN Complex at Human Telomeres
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Date
2024
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Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
Telomeres protect chromosome ends from unplanned DNA repair by assembling
a protein complex (shelterin in humans) onto short DNA repeats which are
synthesised by the telomerase enzyme. Among the functions of shelterin is the
regulation of telomerase and the inhibition of the DNA damage response (DDR)
at chromosome ends, which resemble DNA double-stranded breaks (DSBs). The
MRN complex (RAD50/MRE11/NBS1) initiates repair of DSBs and activates the
ATM kinase in the DDR. ATM is also implicated in telomerase activation. A key
role of the telomeric complex is to regulate the activity of MRN. Previous work in
the laboratory indicated that telomeric protein Rif2 in budding yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae inhibits MRN (MRX in yeast) via a motif called MIN
(MRN/X-inhibitory motif) which I found arose by convergent evolution also in the
Taz1 telomeric protein of fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. I showed
that the MIN motifs of Rif2 and Taz1 bind to a region in the globular domain of
RAD50. Further, I showed that human shelterin protein TRF2 binds to the same
region of RAD50. My results reveal that a motif in TRF2 called iDDR binds
directly to RAD50 in a manner similar to the MIN motif. The MRE11 nuclease is
activated by the CtIP protein at DSBs: I showed that the C-terminal region of CtIP
binds to RAD50 in both human and budding yeast cells in a manner predicted to
be incompatible with iDDR/MIN binding, suggesting that CtIP and the iDDR
compete for binding to RAD50. Consistent with this, I showed reduction of
resistance to genotoxic agents in cells over-expressing TRF2iDDR. These
findings highlight the essential role of telomeric proteins in directly inhibiting the
MRN complex and extend our understanding of how TRF2 regulates the DDR at
chromosome ends in human cells.
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Keywords
Telomeres, DNA damage response (DDR), DNA double-stranded breaks (DSBs, MRN complex, TRF2, iDDR, CtIP