Opposing Roles of FANCJ and HLTF Protect Forks and Restrain Replication during Stress
Peng, Min ; Cong, Ke ; Panzarino, Nicholas J. ; Nayak, Sumeet ; Calvo, Jennifer ; Deng, Bin ; Zhu, Lihua Julie ; Morocz, Monika ; Hegedus, Lili ; Haracska, Lajos ... show 1 more
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FANCJ/BACH1/BRIP1
Fanconi anemia
fork degradation
fork protection
helicase
hereditary breast cancer
iPOND
replication stress response
replisome
Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins
Cancer Biology
Cell Biology
Cells
Congenital, Hereditary, and Neonatal Diseases and Abnormalities
Female Urogenital Diseases and Pregnancy Complications
Hemic and Lymphatic Diseases
Neoplasms
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Abstract
The DNA helicase FANCJ is mutated in hereditary breast and ovarian cancer and Fanconi anemia (FA). Nevertheless, how loss of FANCJ translates to disease pathogenesis remains unclear. We addressed this question by analyzing proteins associated with replication forks in cells with or without FANCJ. We demonstrate that FANCJ-knockout (FANCJ-KO) cells have alterations in the replisome that are consistent with enhanced replication stress, including an aberrant accumulation of the fork remodeling factor helicase-like transcription factor (HLTF). Correspondingly, HLTF contributes to fork degradation in FANCJ-KO cells. Unexpectedly, the unrestrained DNA synthesis that characterizes HLTF-deficient cells is FANCJ dependent and correlates with S1 nuclease sensitivity and fork degradation. These results suggest that FANCJ and HLTF promote replication fork integrity, in part by counteracting each other to keep fork remodeling and elongation in check. Indicating one protein compensates for loss of the other, loss of both HLTF and FANCJ causes a more severe replication stress response.
Source
Cell Rep. 2018 Sep 18;24(12):3251-3261. doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.08.065. Link to article on publisher's site