TopBP1 interacts with BLM to maintain genome stability but is dispensable for preventing BLM degradation.

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Date
2015-03-19ICR Author
Author
Blackford, AN
Nieminuszczy, J
Schwab, RA
Galanty, Y
Jackson, SP
Niedzwiedz, W
Type
Journal Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The Bloom syndrome helicase BLM and topoisomerase-IIβ-binding protein 1 (TopBP1) are key regulators of genome stability. It was recently proposed that BLM phosphorylation on Ser338 mediates its interaction with TopBP1, to protect BLM from ubiquitylation and degradation (Wang et al., 2013). Here, we show that the BLM-TopBP1 interaction does not involve Ser338 but instead requires BLM phosphorylation on Ser304. Furthermore, we establish that disrupting this interaction does not markedly affect BLM stability. However, BLM-TopBP1 binding is important for maintaining genome integrity, because in its absence cells display increased sister chromatid exchanges, replication origin firing and chromosomal aberrations. Therefore, the BLM-TopBP1 interaction maintains genome stability not by controlling BLM protein levels, but via another as-yet undetermined mechanism. Finally, we identify critical residues that mediate interactions between TopBP1 and MDC1, and between BLM and TOP3A/RMI1/RMI2. Taken together, our findings provide molecular insights into a key tumor suppressor and genome stability network.
Collections
Subject
Hela Cells
Humans
Genomic Instability
DNA Topoisomerases, Type I
Serine
Carrier Proteins
DNA-Binding Proteins
Trans-Activators
Nuclear Proteins
Amino Acid Sequence
Phosphorylation
Mutation
Molecular Sequence Data
RecQ Helicases
Research team
Cancer and Genome Instability
Language
eng
Date accepted
2015-02-04
License start date
2015-03
Citation
Molecular cell, 2015, 57 (6), pp. 1133 - 1141
Publisher
CELL PRESS