MCM8IP activates the MCM8-9 helicase to promote DNA synthesis and homologous recombination upon DNA damage.

Journal: Nature Communications
Published:
Abstract

Homologous recombination (HR) mediates the error-free repair of DNA double-strand breaks to maintain genomic stability. Here we characterize C17orf53/MCM8IP, an OB-fold containing protein that binds ssDNA, as a DNA repair factor involved in HR. MCM8IP-deficient cells exhibit HR defects, especially in long-tract gene conversion, occurring downstream of RAD51 loading, consistent with a role for MCM8IP in HR-dependent DNA synthesis. Moreover, loss of MCM8IP confers cellular sensitivity to crosslinking agents and PARP inhibition. Importantly, we report that MCM8IP directly associates with MCM8-9, a helicase complex mutated in primary ovarian insufficiency, and RPA1. We additionally show that the interactions of MCM8IP with MCM8-9 and RPA facilitate HR and promote replication fork progression and cellular viability in response to treatment with crosslinking agents. Mechanistically, MCM8IP stimulates the helicase activity of MCM8-9. Collectively, our work identifies MCM8IP as a key regulator of MCM8-9-dependent DNA synthesis during DNA recombination and replication.

Authors
Jen-wei Huang, Ananya Acharya, Angelo Taglialatela, Tarun Nambiar, Raquel Cuella Martin, Giuseppe Leuzzi, Samuel Hayward, Sarah Joseph, Gregory Brunette, Roopesh Anand, Rajesh Soni, Nathan Clark, Kara Bernstein, Petr Cejka, Alberto Ciccia