Genome-Wide Analysis of Factors Affecting Transcription Elongation and DNA Repair: A New Role for PAF and Ccr4-Not in Transcription-Coupled Repair

Hélène Gaillard(Universidad de Sevilla), Cristina Tous(Universidad de Sevilla), Javier Botet(Universidad de Salamanca), Cristina González‐Aguilera(Centro Andaluz de Biología Molecular y Medicina Regenerativa), Maria Quintero(Universidad de Sevilla), Laia Viladevall(Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), Marı́a Garcı́a-Rubio(Universidad de Sevilla), Alfonso Rodríguez‐Gil(Universidad de Sevilla), Antonio Marín García(Universidad de Sevilla), Joaquı́n Ariño(Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), José Luis Revuelta(Universidad de Salamanca), Sebastián Chávez(Universidad de Sevilla), Andrés Aguilera(Centro Andaluz de Biología Molecular y Medicina Regenerativa)
PLoS Genetics
February 6, 2009
Cited by 93Open Access
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Abstract

RNA polymerases frequently deal with a number of obstacles during transcription elongation that need to be removed for transcription resumption. One important type of hindrance consists of DNA lesions, which are removed by transcription-coupled repair (TC-NER), a specific sub-pathway of nucleotide excision repair. To improve our knowledge of transcription elongation and its coupling to TC-NER, we used the yeast library of non-essential knock-out mutations to screen for genes conferring resistance to the transcription-elongation inhibitor mycophenolic acid and the DNA-damaging agent 4-nitroquinoline-N-oxide. Our data provide evidence that subunits of the SAGA and Ccr4-Not complexes, Mediator, Bre1, Bur2, and Fun12 affect transcription elongation to different extents. Given the dependency of TC-NER on RNA Polymerase II transcription and the fact that the few proteins known to be involved in TC-NER are related to transcription, we performed an in-depth TC-NER analysis of a selection of mutants. We found that mutants of the PAF and Ccr4-Not complexes are impaired in TC-NER. This study provides evidence that PAF and Ccr4-Not are required for efficient TC-NER in yeast, unraveling a novel function for these transcription complexes and opening new perspectives for the understanding of TC-NER and its functional interconnection with transcription elongation.


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