Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences (Jul 2022)

BLM Sumoylation Is Required for Replication Stability and Normal Fork Velocity During DNA Replication

  • Christelle de Renty,
  • Kelvin W. Pond,
  • Mary K. Yagle,
  • Nathan A. Ellis,
  • Nathan A. Ellis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2022.875102
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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BLM is sumoylated in response to replication stress. We have studied the role of BLM sumoylation in physiologically normal and replication-stressed conditions by expressing in BLM-deficient cells a BLM with SUMO acceptor-site mutations, which we refer to as SUMO-mutant BLM cells. SUMO-mutant BLM cells exhibited multiple defects in both stressed and unstressed DNA replication conditions, including, in hydroxyurea-treated cells, reduced fork restart and increased fork collapse and, in untreated cells, slower fork velocity and increased fork instability as assayed by track-length asymmetry. We further showed by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching that SUMO-mutant BLM protein was less dynamic than normal BLM and comprised a higher immobile fraction at collapsed replication forks. BLM sumoylation has previously been linked to the recruitment of RAD51 to stressed forks in hydroxyurea-treated cells. An important unresolved question is whether the failure to efficiently recruit RAD51 is the explanation for replication stress in untreated SUMO-mutant BLM cells.

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