Cell Reports (Mar 2025)

Custom affinity probes reveal DNA-damage-induced, ssDNA-independent chromatin SUMOylation in budding yeast

  • Vera Tröster,
  • Ronald P. Wong,
  • Arne Börgel,
  • Baris Cakilkaya,
  • Christian Renz,
  • Martin M. Möckel,
  • Karolin Eifler-Olivi,
  • Joana Marinho,
  • Thomas Reinberg,
  • Sven Furler,
  • Jonas V. Schaefer,
  • Andreas Plückthun,
  • Eva Wolf,
  • Helle D. Ulrich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2025.115353
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44, no. 3
p. 115353

Abstract

Read online

Summary: The small ubiquitin-related modifier SUMO regulates cellular processes in eukaryotes either by modulating individual protein-protein interactions or with relaxed substrate selectivity by group modification. Here, we report the isolation and characterization of designed ankyrin repeat protein (DARPin)-based affinity probes directed against budding yeast SUMO (Smt3). We validate selected DARPins as compartment-specific inhibitors or neutral detection agents. Structural characterization reveals a recognition mode distinct from that of natural SUMO interactors. In vivo application pinpoints Smt3’s essential function to the nucleus and demonstrates DARPin-mediated sensitization toward various stress conditions. A subset of selected clones is validated as SUMOylation reporters in cells. In this manner, we identify a DNA-damage-induced nuclear SUMOylation response that—in contrast to previously reported chromatin group SUMOylation—is independent of single-stranded DNA and the SUMO-E3 Siz2 but depends on Mms21 and likely reflects late intermediates of homologous recombination. Thus, Smt3-specific DARPins can provide insight into the dynamics of SUMOylation in defined subcellular structures.

Keywords