PLoS Biology (Jun 2010)

A genome-scale DNA repair RNAi screen identifies SPG48 as a novel gene associated with hereditary spastic paraplegia.

  • Mikołaj Słabicki,
  • Mirko Theis,
  • Dragomir B Krastev,
  • Sergey Samsonov,
  • Emeline Mundwiller,
  • Magno Junqueira,
  • Maciej Paszkowski-Rogacz,
  • Joan Teyra,
  • Anne-Kristin Heninger,
  • Ina Poser,
  • Fabienne Prieur,
  • Jérémy Truchetto,
  • Christian Confavreux,
  • Cécilia Marelli,
  • Alexandra Durr,
  • Jean Philippe Camdessanche,
  • Alexis Brice,
  • Andrej Shevchenko,
  • M Teresa Pisabarro,
  • Giovanni Stevanin,
  • Frank Buchholz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000408
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 6
p. e1000408

Abstract

Read online

DNA repair is essential to maintain genome integrity, and genes with roles in DNA repair are frequently mutated in a variety of human diseases. Repair via homologous recombination typically restores the original DNA sequence without introducing mutations, and a number of genes that are required for homologous recombination DNA double-strand break repair (HR-DSBR) have been identified. However, a systematic analysis of this important DNA repair pathway in mammalian cells has not been reported. Here, we describe a genome-scale endoribonuclease-prepared short interfering RNA (esiRNA) screen for genes involved in DNA double strand break repair. We report 61 genes that influenced the frequency of HR-DSBR and characterize in detail one of the genes that decreased the frequency of HR-DSBR. We show that the gene KIAA0415 encodes a putative helicase that interacts with SPG11 and SPG15, two proteins mutated in hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP). We identify mutations in HSP patients, discovering KIAA0415/SPG48 as a novel HSP-associated gene, and show that a KIAA0415/SPG48 mutant cell line is more sensitive to DNA damaging drugs. We present the first genome-scale survey of HR-DSBR in mammalian cells providing a dataset that should accelerate the discovery of novel genes with roles in DNA repair and associated medical conditions. The discovery that proteins forming a novel protein complex are required for efficient HR-DSBR and are mutated in patients suffering from HSP suggests a link between HSP and DNA repair.