Biomolecules (Jan 2025)

Cell Type Specific Suppression of Hyper-Recombination by Human RAD18 Is Linked to Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen K164 Ubiquitination

  • Colette B. Rogers,
  • Wendy Leung,
  • Ryan M. Baxley,
  • Rachel E. Kram,
  • Liangjun Wang,
  • Joseph P. Buytendorp,
  • Khoi Le,
  • David A. Largaespada,
  • Eric A. Hendrickson,
  • Anja-Katrin Bielinsky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom15010150
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
p. 150

Abstract

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RAD18 is a conserved eukaryotic E3 ubiquitin ligase that promotes genome stability through multiple pathways. One of these is gap-filling DNA synthesis at active replication forks and in post-replicative DNA. RAD18 also regulates homologous recombination (HR) repair of DNA breaks; however, the current literature describing the contribution of RAD18 to HR in mammalian systems has not reached a consensus. To investigate this, we examined three independent RAD18-null human cell lines. Our analyses found that loss of RAD18 in HCT116, but neither hTERT RPE-1 nor DLD1 cell lines, resulted in elevated sister chromatid exchange, gene conversion, and gene targeting, i.e., HCT116 mutants were hyper-recombinogenic (hyper-rec). Interestingly, these phenotypes were linked to RAD18’s role in PCNA K164 ubiquitination, as HCT116 PCNAK164R/+ mutants were also hyper-rec, consistent with previous studies in rad18−/− and pcnaK164R avian DT40 cells. Importantly, the knockdown of UBC9 to prevent PCNA K164 SUMOylation did not affect hyper-recombination, strengthening the link between increased recombination and RAD18-catalyzed PCNA K164 ubiquitination, but not K164 SUMOylation. We propose that the hierarchy of post-replicative repair and HR, intrinsic to each cell type, dictates whether RAD18 is required for suppression of hyper-recombination and that this function is linked to PCNA K164 ubiquitination.

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