Abstract
Double-stranded breaks (DSBs) are toxic DNA damage and a serious threat to genomic integrity. Thus, all living organisms have evolved multiple mechanisms of DNA DSB repair, the two principal ones being classical-non homologous end joining (C-NHEJ), and homology dependent recombination (HDR). In mammals, C-NHEJ is the predominate DSB repair pathway, but how a cell chooses to repair a particular DSB by a certain pathway is still not mechanistically clear. To uncover novel regulators of DSB repair pathway choice, we performed a kinome-wide screen in a human cell line engineered to express a dominant-negative C-NHEJ factor. The intellectual basis for such a screen was our hypothesis that a C-NHEJ-crippled cell line might need to upregulate other DSB repair pathways, including HDR, in order to survive. This screen identified Bromodomain-containing Protein 3 (BRD3) as a protein whose expression was almost completely ablated specifically in a C-NHEJ-defective cell line. Subsequent experimentation demonstrated that BRD3 is a negative regulator of HDR as BRD3-null cell lines proved to be hyper-recombinogenic for gene conversion, sister chromatid exchanges and gene targeting. Mechanistically, BRD3 appears to be working at the level of Radiation Sensitive 51 (RAD51) recruitment. Overall, our results demonstrate that BRD3 is a novel regulator of human DSB repair pathway choice.
Original language | English (US) |
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Article number | 103445 |
Journal | DNA Repair |
Volume | 122 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Feb 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:Funding for the Hendrickson laboratory was provided in part through grants from the National Cancer Institute ( CA154461 and CA266524 ). This agency had no involvement in the study design, the data collection, the analysis nor the interpretations presented here.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023
Keywords
- BRD3
- HDR
- Kinome
- PRKDC
- RAD51
PubMed: MeSH publication types
- Journal Article
- Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural