Phosphorylated RPA recruits PALB2 to stalled DNA replication forks to facilitate fork recovery.

Publication Type Academic Article
Authors Murphy A, Fitzgerald M, Ro T, Kim J, Rabinowitsch A, Chowdhury D, Schildkraut C, Borowiec J
Journal J Cell Biol
Volume 206
Issue 4
Pagination 493-507
Date Published 08/11/2014
ISSN 1540-8140
Keywords DNA Damage, DNA Repair, DNA Replication, Nuclear Proteins, Replication Protein A, Tumor Suppressor Proteins
Abstract Phosphorylation of replication protein A (RPA) by Cdk2 and the checkpoint kinase ATR (ATM and Rad3 related) during replication fork stalling stabilizes the replisome, but how these modifications safeguard the fork is not understood. To address this question, we used single-molecule fiber analysis in cells expressing a phosphorylation-defective RPA2 subunit or lacking phosphatase activity toward RPA2. Deregulation of RPA phosphorylation reduced synthesis at forks both during replication stress and recovery from stress. The ability of phosphorylated RPA to stimulate fork recovery is mediated through the PALB2 tumor suppressor protein. RPA phosphorylation increased localization of PALB2 and BRCA2 to RPA-bound nuclear foci in cells experiencing replication stress. Phosphorylated RPA also stimulated recruitment of PALB2 to single-strand deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in a cell-free system. Expression of mutant RPA2 or loss of PALB2 expression led to significant DNA damage after replication stress, a defect accentuated by poly-ADP (adenosine diphosphate) ribose polymerase inhibitors. These data demonstrate that phosphorylated RPA recruits repair factors to stalled forks, thereby enhancing fork integrity during replication stress.
DOI 10.1083/jcb.201404111
PubMed ID 25113031
PubMed Central ID PMC4137056
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