Ubiquitination of DNA Damage-Stalled RNAPII Promotes Transcription-Coupled Repair
Author(s) -
Yuka Nakazawa,
Yuichiro Hara,
Yasuyoshi Oka,
Okiru Komine,
Diana van den Heuvel,
Chaowan Guo,
Yasukazu Daigaku,
Mayu Isono,
Yuxi He,
Mayuko Shimada,
Kana Kato,
Nan Jia,
Satoru Hashimoto,
Yuko Kotani,
Yuka Miyoshi,
Miyako Tanaka,
Akira Sobue,
Norisato Mitsutake,
Takayoshi Suganami,
Akio Masuda,
Kinji Ohno,
Shinichiro Nakada,
Tomoji Mashimo,
Koji Yamanaka,
Martijn S. Luijsterburg,
Tomoo Ogi
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2020.02.010
Subject(s) - biology , microbiology and biotechnology , ubiquitin , dna damage , transcription (linguistics) , dna repair , dna , genetics , gene , linguistics , philosophy
Transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (TC-NER) is initiated by the stalling of elongating RNA polymerase II (RNAPIIo) at DNA lesions. The ubiquitination of RNAPIIo in response to DNA damage is an evolutionarily conserved event, but its function in mammals is unknown. Here, we identified a single DNA damage-induced ubiquitination site in RNAPII at RPB1-K1268, which regulates transcription recovery and DNA damage resistance. Mechanistically, RPB1-K1268 ubiquitination stimulates the association of the core-TFIIH complex with stalled RNAPIIo through a transfer mechanism that also involves UVSSA-K414 ubiquitination. We developed a strand-specific ChIP-seq method, which revealed RPB1-K1268 ubiquitination is important for repair and the resolution of transcriptional bottlenecks at DNA lesions. Finally, RPB1-K1268R knockin mice displayed a short life-span, premature aging, and neurodegeneration. Our results reveal RNAPII ubiquitination provides a two-tier protection mechanism by activating TC-NER and, in parallel, the processing of DNA damage-stalled RNAPIIo, which together prevent prolonged transcription arrest and protect against neurodegeneration.
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