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A mechanism for oxidative damage repair at gene regulatory elements

Version 2 2024-03-12, 20:40
Version 1 2023-12-20, 12:09
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 20:40 authored by Swagat RaySwagat Ray, Arwa A. Abugable, Sherif F. El-Khamisy, Jacob Parker, Kirsty Liversidge, Nelma M. Palminha, Chunyan Liao, Adelina E. Acosta-Martin, Cleide D. S. Souza, Mateusz Jurga, Ian Sudbery
<p>Oxidative genome damage is an unavoidable consequence of cellular metabolism. It arises at gene regulatory elements by epigenetic demethylation during transcriptional activation1,2. Here we show that promoters are protected from oxidative damage via a process mediated by the nuclear mitotic apparatus protein NuMA (also known as NUMA1). NuMA exhibits genomic occupancy approximately 100 bp around transcription start sites. It binds the initiating form of RNA polymerase II, pause-release factors and single-strand break repair (SSBR) components such as TDP1. The binding is increased on chromatin following oxidative damage, and TDP1 enrichment at damaged chromatin is facilitated by NuMA. Depletion of NuMA increases oxidative damage at promoters. NuMA promotes transcription by limiting the polyADP-ribosylation of RNA polymerase II, increasing its availability and release from pausing at promoters. Metabolic labelling of nascent RNA identifies genes that depend on NuMA for transcription including immediate–early response genes. Complementation of NuMA-deficient cells with a mutant that mediates binding to SSBR, or a mitotic separation-of-function mutant, restores SSBR defects. These findings underscore the importance of oxidative DNA damage repair at gene regulatory elements and describe a process fulfilling this function.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Nature

Volume

609

Pages/Article Number

1038-1047

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

ISSN

0028-0836

Date Submitted

2022-10-11

Date Accepted

2022-08-10

Date of First Publication

2022-09-28

Date of Final Publication

2022-09-29

Date Document First Uploaded

2022-10-11

ePrints ID

51942

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