Widespread chromatin context-dependencies of DNA double-strand break repair proteins

Xabier Vergara(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Anna G. Manjón(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Marcel de Haas(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Ben Morris(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Ruben Schep(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Christ Leemans(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Anoek Friskes(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Roderick L. Beijersbergen(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Mathijs A. Sanders(Wellcome Sanger Institute), René H. Medema(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Bas van Steensel(Erasmus MC)
Nature Communications
June 22, 2024
Cited by 20Open Access
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Abstract

DNA double-strand breaks are repaired by multiple pathways, including non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) and microhomology-mediated end-joining (MMEJ). The balance of these pathways is dependent on the local chromatin context, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. By combining knockout screening with a dual MMEJ:NHEJ reporter inserted in 19 different chromatin environments, we identified dozens of DNA repair proteins that modulate pathway balance dependent on the local chromatin state. Proteins that favor NHEJ mostly synergize with euchromatin, while proteins that favor MMEJ generally synergize with distinct types of heterochromatin. Examples of the former are BRCA2 and POLL, and of the latter the FANC complex and ATM. Moreover, in a diversity of human cancer types, loss of several of these proteins alters the distribution of pathway-specific mutations between heterochromatin and euchromatin. Together, these results uncover a complex network of proteins that regulate MMEJ:NHEJ balance in a chromatin context-dependent manner.


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