Cell Reports (Nov 2023)

53BP1 interacts with the RNA primer from Okazaki fragments to support their processing during unperturbed DNA replication

  • Melissa Leriche,
  • Clara Bonnet,
  • Jagannath Jana,
  • Gita Chhetri,
  • Sabrina Mennour,
  • Sylvain Martineau,
  • Vincent Pennaneach,
  • Didier Busso,
  • Xavier Veaute,
  • Pascale Bertrand,
  • Sarah Lambert,
  • Kumar Somyajit,
  • Patricia Uguen,
  • Stéphan Vagner

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 11
p. 113412

Abstract

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Summary: RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) are found at replication forks, but their direct interaction with DNA-embedded RNA species remains unexplored. Here, we report that p53-binding protein 1 (53BP1), involved in the DNA damage and replication stress response, is an RBP that directly interacts with Okazaki fragments in the absence of external stress. The recruitment of 53BP1 to nascent DNA shows susceptibility to in situ ribonuclease A treatment and is dependent on PRIM1, which synthesizes the RNA primer of Okazaki fragments. Conversely, depletion of FEN1, resulting in the accumulation of uncleaved RNA primers, increases 53BP1 levels at replication forks, suggesting that RNA primers contribute to the recruitment of 53BP1 at the lagging DNA strand. 53BP1 depletion induces an accumulation of S-phase poly(ADP-ribose), which constitutes a sensor of unligated Okazaki fragments. Collectively, our data indicate that 53BP1 is anchored at nascent DNA through its RNA-binding activity, highlighting the role of an RNA-protein interaction at replication forks.

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