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Phase separation properties of RPA combine high-affinity ssDNA binding with dynamic condensate functions at telomeres

Authors :
Vincent Spegg
Andreas Panagopoulos
Merula Stout
Aswini Krishnan
Giordano Reginato
Ralph Imhof
Bernd Roschitzki
Petr Cejka
Matthias Altmeyer
Source :
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, 30 (4)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
ETH Zurich, 2023.

Abstract

RPA has been shown to protect single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) intermediates from instability and breakage. RPA binds ssDNA with sub-nanomolar affinity, yet dynamic turnover is required for downstream ssDNA transactions. How ultrahigh-affinity binding and dynamic turnover are achieved simultaneously is not well understood. Here we reveal that RPA has a strong propensity to assemble into dynamic condensates. In solution, purified RPA phase separates into liquid droplets with fusion and surface wetting behavior. Phase separation is stimulated by sub-stoichiometric amounts of ssDNA, but not RNA or double-stranded DNA, and ssDNA gets selectively enriched in RPA condensates. We find the RPA2 subunit required for condensation and multi-site phosphorylation of the RPA2 N-terminal intrinsically disordered region to regulate RPA self-interaction. Functionally, quantitative proximity proteomics links RPA condensation to telomere clustering and integrity in cancer cells. Collectively, our results suggest that RPA-coated ssDNA is contained in dynamic RPA condensates whose properties are important for genome organization and stability.<br />Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, 30 (4)<br />ISSN:1545-9993<br />ISSN:1545-9985

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15459993 and 15459985
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, 30 (4)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....72ee80ab0e5b6daef7daa24ba376e915
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000610524