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Acetylation of XPF by TIP60 facilitates XPF-ERCC1 complex assembly and activation.

TLDR
It is shown that TIP60, also known as KAT5, directly acetylates XPF at Lys911 following UV irradiation or treatment with mitomycin C and that this acetylation is required for XPF-ERCC1 complex assembly and subsequent activation.
Abstract
The XPF-ERCC1 heterodimer is a structure-specific endonuclease that is essential for nucleotide excision repair (NER) and interstrand crosslink (ICL) repair in mammalian cells. However, whether and how XPF binding to ERCC1 is regulated has not yet been established. Here, we show that TIP60, also known as KAT5, a haplo-insufficient tumor suppressor, directly acetylates XPF at Lys911 following UV irradiation or treatment with mitomycin C and that this acetylation is required for XPF-ERCC1 complex assembly and subsequent activation. Mechanistically, acetylation of XPF at Lys911 disrupts the Glu907-Lys911 salt bridge, thereby leading to exposure of a previously unidentified second binding site for ERCC1. Accordingly, loss of XPF acetylation impairs the damage-induced XPF-ERCC1 interaction, resulting in defects in both NER and ICL repair. Our results not only reveal a mechanism that regulates XPF-ERCC1 complex assembly and activation, but also provide important insight into the role of TIP60 in the maintenance of genome stability. The XPF-ERCC1 heterodimer is an endonuclease involved in nucleotide excision (NER) and interstrand crosslink (ICL) repair in mammalian cells. Here, the authors provide insights into its regulation by revealing that TIP60 regulates XPF-ERCC1 complex assembly and activation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Epigenetic crosstalk between hypoxia and tumor driven by HIF regulation.

TL;DR: A more systematic review from epigenetic perspective is made, helping others better understand hypoxia or HIF pathway, and providing more established and potential therapeutic strategies in tumors to facilitate epigenetic studies of tumors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of histone acetyltransferases MOF and Tip60 in genome stability.

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of histone acetyltransferases and Tip60 mediated acetylation in DNA DSB repair is discussed. But, the authors do not consider the effect of the histone posttranslational modifications on DNA repair.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular regulation of hypoxia through the lenses of noncoding RNAs and epitranscriptome

TL;DR: The focus of this review is to illustrate the molecular orchestration underlying hypoxia biology, especially in cancers, which can help in identifying promising therapeutic targets in Hypoxia-induced cancers.
Journal ArticleDOI

New insights into the DNA repair pathway choice with NuA4/TIP60.

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors discuss the contribution of the NuA4/TIP60 histone acetyltransferase/chromatin remodeling complex during DSBs repair, and how they regulate chromatin dynamics, modify non-histone substrates to allow DNA end resection and recombination.
References
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The DNA-damage response in human biology and disease

TL;DR: The authors' improving understanding of DNA-damage responses is providing new avenues for disease management, and these responses are biologically significant because they prevent diverse human diseases.
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The DNA Damage Response: Making It Safe to Play with Knives

TL;DR: This review will focus on how the DDR controls DNA repair and the phenotypic consequences of defects in these critical regulatory functions in mammals.
Journal ArticleDOI

PCNA, the Maestro of the Replication Fork

TL;DR: Proliferating cell nuclear antigen -a cofactor of DNA polymerases that encircles DNA-orchestrates several of these functions by recruiting crucial players to the replication fork, indicating that these interactions do not occur simultaneously during replication.
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Mammalian DNA nucleotide excision repair reconstituted with purified protein components.

TL;DR: Nucleotide excision repair is the principal way by which human cells remove UV damage from DNA by combining DNA polymerase epsilon, RFC, PCNA, and DNA ligase I with ERCC1- and XPF-correcting activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sequential Assembly of the Nucleotide Excision Repair Factors In Vivo

TL;DR: XPC is identified as the earliest known NER factor in the reaction mechanism, insight is given into the order of subsequent NER components, evidence for a dual role of XPA is provided, and a concept of sequential assembly of repair proteins at the site of the damage rather than a preassembled repairosome is supported.
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