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Human exonuclease 5 is a novel sliding exonuclease required for genome stability
- Source :
- The Journal of biological chemistry. 287(51)
- Publication Year :
- 2012
-
Abstract
- Previously, we characterized Saccharomyces cerevisiae exonuclease 5 (EXO5), which is required for mitochondrial genome maintenance. Here, we identify the human homolog (C1orf176; EXO5) that functions in the repair of nuclear DNA damage. Human EXO5 (hEXO5) contains an iron-sulfur cluster. It is a single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)-specific bidirectional exonuclease with a strong preference for 5′-ends. After loading at an ssDNA end, hEXO5 slides extensively along the ssDNA prior to cutting, hence the designation sliding exonuclease. However, the single-stranded binding protein human replication protein A (hRPA) restricts sliding and enforces a unique, species-specific 5′-directionality onto hEXO5. This specificity is lost with a mutant form of hRPA (hRPA-t11) that fails to interact with hEXO5. hEXO5 localizes to nuclear repair foci in response to DNA damage, and its depletion in human cells leads to an increased sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents, in particular interstrand cross-linking-inducing agents. Depletion of hEXO5 also results in an increase in spontaneous and damage-induced chromosome abnormalities including the frequency of triradial chromosomes, suggesting an additional defect in the resolution of stalled DNA replication forks in hEXO5-depleted cells.
- Subjects :
- Genome instability
Exonuclease
Exonucleases
Iron-Sulfur Proteins
DNA Repair
DNA repair
DNA damage
Ultraviolet Rays
Molecular Sequence Data
DNA, Single-Stranded
Biology
DNA and Chromosomes
Biochemistry
Genomic Instability
Substrate Specificity
chemistry.chemical_compound
Replication Protein A
Humans
Amino Acid Sequence
Molecular Biology
Replication protein A
Conserved Sequence
Chromosome Aberrations
Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
Genome, Human
Mitochondrial genome maintenance
DNA replication
Cell Biology
Molecular biology
Cell biology
Cross-Linking Reagents
chemistry
biology.protein
Biocatalysis
Protein Multimerization
DNA
Protein Binding
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1083351X
- Volume :
- 287
- Issue :
- 51
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of biological chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....573422539f705367ff5497a11250c52f