Thomas Ward
Scientific Officer
Tel: +44 (0)1865 222405
Fax: +44 (0)1865 222431
e-mail:
thomas.ward@imm.ox.ac.uk
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Barber LJ, Ward TA, Hartley JA, McHugh PJ. DNA interstrand cross-link repair in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cell cycle: overlapping roles for PSO2 (SNM1) with MutS factors and EXO1 during S phase. Mol. Cell. Biol. 2005 Mar 25(6): 2297-2309 [PubMed]
Pso2/Snm1 is a member of the beta-CASP metallo-beta-lactamase family of
proteins that include the V(D)J recombination factor Artemis.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae pso2 mutants are specifically sensitive to
agents that induce DNA interstrand cross-links (ICLs). Here we
establish a novel overlapping function for PSO2 with MutS mismatch
repair factors and the 5'-3' exonuclease Exo1 in the repair of DNA
ICLs, which is confined to S phase. Our data demonstrate a requirement
for NER and Pso2, or Exo1 and MutS factors, in the processing of ICLs,
and this is required prior to the repair of ICL-induced DNA
double-strand breaks (DSBs) that form during replication. Using a
chromosomally integrated inverted-repeat substrate, we also show that
loss of both pso2 and exo1/msh2 reduces spontaneous homologous
recombination rates. Therefore, PSO2, EXO1, and MSH2 also appear to
have overlapping roles in the processing of some forms of endogenous
DNA damage that occur at an irreversibly collapsed replication fork.
Significantly, our analysis of ICL repair in cells synchronized for
each cell cycle phase has revealed that homologous recombination does
not play a major role in the direct repair of ICLs, even in G2, when a
suitable template is readily available. Rather, we propose that
recombination is primarily involved in the repair of DSBs that arise
from the collapse of replication forks at ICLs. These findings have led
to considerable clarification of the complex genetic relationship
between various ICL repair pathways.
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