Sir3 heterochromatin protein promotes non‐homologous end joining by direct inhibition of Sae2

0301 basic medicine DNA End-Joining Repair Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins [SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] Telomere Endonucleases 03 medical and health sciences Protein Domains Heterochromatin Point Mutation Amino Acid Sequence Silent Information Regulator Proteins, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Protein Binding
DOI: 10.15252/embj.2021108813 Publication Date: 2021-11-26T07:43:22Z
ABSTRACT
Heterochromatin is a conserved feature of eukaryotic chromosomes, with central roles in gene expression regulation and maintenance of genome stability. How heterochromatin proteins regulate DNA repair remains poorly described. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the silent information regulator (SIR) complex assembles heterochromatin-like chromatin at sub-telomeric chromosomal regions. SIR-mediated repressive chromatin limits DNA double-strand break (DSB) resection, thus protecting damaged chromosome ends during homologous recombination (HR). As resection initiation represents the crossroads between repair by non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) or HR, we asked whether SIR-mediated heterochromatin regulates NHEJ. We show that SIRs promote NHEJ through two pathways, one depending on repressive chromatin assembly, and the other relying on Sir3 in a manner that is independent of its heterochromatin-promoting function. Via physical interaction with the Sae2 protein, Sir3 impairs Sae2-dependent functions of the MRX (Mre11-Rad50-Xrs2) complex, thereby limiting Mre11-mediated resection, delaying MRX removal from DSB ends, and promoting NHEJ.
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