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Site-specific proteolytic cleavage prevents ubiquitination and degradation of human REV3L, the catalytic subunit of DNA polymerase ζ

Authors :
Li Xialu
Sen Song
Shiguo Feng
Yuan Shao
Li Miaomiao
Yingying Wang
Wang Fengting
Fei Liu
Wei Xiao
Shuo Zheng
Pan Li
Kai Zhang
Yanyan Li
Rong Wang
Source :
Nucleic Acids Research
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2020.

Abstract

REV3L, the catalytic subunit of DNA polymerase ζ (Pol ζ), is indispensable for translesion DNA synthesis, which protects cells from deleterious DNA lesions resulting from various intrinsic and environmental sources. However, REV3L lacks a proofreading exonuclease activity and consequently bypasses DNA lesions at the expense of increased mutations, which poses a severe threat to genome stability. Here we report a site-specific proteolytic event of human REV3L. We show that REV3L is cleaved by a threonine aspartase, Taspase1 (TASP1), to generate an N-terminal 70-kDa fragment (N70) and a polypeptide carrying the C-terminal polymerase catalytic domain in human cells. Strikingly, such a post-translational cleavage event plays a vital role in controlling REV3L stability by preventing ubiquitination and proteasome-mediated degradation of REV3L. Indicative of the biological importance of the above REV3L post-translational processing, cellular responses to UV and cisplatin-induced DNA lesions are markedly impaired in human HCT116 cell derivatives bearing defined point mutations in the endogenous REV3L gene that compromise REV3L cleavage. These findings establish a new paradigm in modulating the abundance of REV3L through site-specific proteolysis in human cells.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13624962 and 03051048
Volume :
48
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nucleic Acids Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....72e8295ac1d12c341bd1828836fa3431