Bre1-dependent H2B ubiquitination promotes homologous recombination by stimulating histone eviction at DNA breaks
Author(s) -
Sihao Zheng,
Dan Li,
Zhen Lü,
GuangXue Liu,
Meng Wang,
Poyuan Xing,
Min Wang,
Yang Dong,
Xuejie Wang,
Jingyao Li,
Simin Zhang,
Haoyang Peng,
Grzegorz Ira,
Guohong Li,
Xuefeng Chen
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gky918
Subject(s) - biology , rad51 , histone , homologous recombination , histone h2a , chromatin , dna repair , microbiology and biotechnology , histone methyltransferase , dna damage , histone methylation , histone h2b , dna , dna methylation , genetics , gene expression , gene
Repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) requires eviction of the histones around DNA breaks to allow the loading of numerous repair and checkpoint proteins. However, the mechanism and regulation of this process remain poorly understood. Here, we show that histone H2B ubiquitination (uH2B) promotes histone eviction at DSBs independent of resection or ATP-dependent chromatin remodelers. Cells lacking uH2B or its E3 ubiquitin ligase Bre1 exhibit hyper-resection due to the loss of H3K79 methylation that recruits Rad9, a known negative regulator of resection. Unexpectedly, despite excessive single-strand DNA being produced, bre1Δ cells show defective RPA and Rad51 recruitment and impaired repair by homologous recombination and response to DNA damage. The HR defect in bre1Δ cells correlates with impaired histone loss at DSBs and can be largely rescued by depletion of CAF-1, a histone chaperone depositing histones H3-H4. Overexpression of Rad51 stimulates histone eviction and partially suppresses the recombination defects of bre1Δ mutant. Thus, we propose that Bre1 mediated-uH2B promotes DSB repair through facilitating histone eviction and subsequent loading of repair proteins.
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