Cell Reports (Jan 2013)

RPA Accumulation during Class Switch Recombination Represents 5′–3′ DNA-End Resection during the S–G2/M Phase of the Cell Cycle

  • Arito Yamane,
  • Davide F. Robbiani,
  • Wolfgang Resch,
  • Anne Bothmer,
  • Hirotaka Nakahashi,
  • Thiago Oliveira,
  • Philipp C. Rommel,
  • Eric J. Brown,
  • Andre Nussenzweig,
  • Michel C. Nussenzweig,
  • Rafael Casellas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2012.12.006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 138 – 147

Abstract

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Activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) promotes chromosomal translocations by inducing DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) at immunoglobulin (Ig) genes and oncogenes in the G1 phase. RPA is a single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)-binding protein that associates with resected DSBs in the S phase and facilitates the assembly of factors involved in homologous repair (HR), such as Rad51. Notably, RPA deposition also marks sites of AID-mediated damage, but its role in Ig gene recombination remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate that RPA associates asymmetrically with resected ssDNA in response to lesions created by AID, recombination-activating genes (RAG), or other nucleases. Small amounts of RPA are deposited at AID targets in G1 in an ATM-dependent manner. In contrast, recruitment in the S–G2/M phase is extensive, ATM independent, and associated with Rad51 accumulation. In the S–G2/M phase, RPA increases in nonhomologous-end-joining-deficient lymphocytes, where there is more extensive DNA-end resection. Thus, most RPA recruitment during class switch recombination represents salvage of unrepaired breaks by homology-based pathways during the S–G2/M phase of the cell cycle.