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Acute MUS81 depletion leads to replication fork slowing and a constitutive DNA damage response

Version 4 2024-03-12, 13:50
Version 3 2023-10-29, 10:16
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 13:50 authored by Meichun Xing, Xiaohui Wang, Timea Palmai-PallagTimea Palmai-Pallag, Huahao Shen, Thomas Helleday, Ian D. Hickson, Songmin Ying

The MUS81 protein belongs to a conserved family of DNA structure-specific nucleases that play important roles in DNA replication and repair. Inactivation of the Mus81 gene in mice has no major deleterious consequences for embryonic development, although cancer susceptibility has been reported. We have investigated the role of MUS81 in human cells by acutely depleting the protein using shRNAs. We found that MUS81 depletion from human fibroblasts leads to accumulation of ssDNA and a constitutive DNA damage response that ultimately activates cellular senescence. Moreover, we show that MUS81 is required for efficient replication fork progression during an unperturbed S-phase, and for recovery of productive replication following replication stalling. These results demonstrate essential roles for the MUS81 nuclease in maintenance of replication fork integrity.

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Oncotarget

Volume

6

Issue

35

Pages/Article Number

37638-37646

Publisher

Impact Journals

ISSN

1949-2553

eISSN

1949-2553

Date Submitted

2015-10-07

Date Accepted

2015-09-11

Date of First Publication

2015-09-22

Date of Final Publication

2015-09-22

Date Document First Uploaded

2015-10-07

ePrints ID

18921