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ScharerDavid Orlando

Scharer, Orlando D.
Schärer Lab.
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Nucleotide excision repair leaves a mark on chromatin: DNA damage detection in nucleosomes

Author(s)
Apelt, KatjaLans, HannesScharer, Orlando D.Luijsterburg, Martijn S.
Issued Date
2021-12
DOI
10.1007/s00018-021-03984-7
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/55667
Citation
CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES, v.78, no.24, pp.7925 - 7942
Abstract
Global genome nucleotide excision repair (GG-NER) eliminates a broad spectrum of DNA lesions from genomic DNA. Genomic DNA is tightly wrapped around histones creating a barrier for DNA repair proteins to access DNA lesions buried in nucleosomal DNA. The DNA-damage sensors XPC and DDB2 recognize DNA lesions in nucleosomal DNA and initiate repair. The emerging view is that a tight interplay between XPC and DDB2 is regulated by post-translational modifications on the damage sensors themselves as well as on chromatin containing DNA lesions. The choreography between XPC and DDB2, their interconnection with post-translational modifications such as ubiquitylation, SUMOylation, methylation, poly(ADP-ribos)ylation, acetylation, and the functional links with chromatin remodelling activities regulate not only the initial recognition of DNA lesions in nucleosomes, but also the downstream recruitment and necessary displacement of GG-NER factors as repair progresses. In this review, we highlight how nucleotide excision repair leaves a mark on chromatin to enable DNA damage detection in nucleosomes.
Publisher
SPRINGER BASEL AG
ISSN
1420-682X
Keyword (Author)
Nucleotide excision repairChromatinDDB2XPCPost-translational modificationPTM
Keyword
P48 SUBUNITUV-INDUCED UBIQUITYLATIONUBIQUITIN LIGASEREMODELING COMPLEXHISTONE H3CELLULAR-RESPONSEBINDING-PROTEINH2AX PHOSPHORYLATIONDISTINCT ROLESXPC PROTEIN

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