Repair of DNA damage induced by the cytidine analog zebularine requires ATR and ATM in arabidopsis

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Abstract

DNA damage repair is an essential cellular mechanism that maintains genome stability. Here, we show that the nonmethylable cytidine analog zebularine induces a DNA damage response in Arabidopsis thaliana, independent of changes in DNA methylation. In contrast to genotoxic agents that induce damage in a cell cycle stage-independent manner, zebularine induces damage specifically during strand synthesis in DNA replication. The signaling of this damage is mediated by additive activity of ATAXIA TELANGIECTASIA MUTATED AND RAD3-RELATED and ATAXIA TELANGIECTASIA MUTATED kinases, which cause postreplicative cell cycle arrest and increased endoreplication. The repair requires a functional STRUCTURAL MAINTENANCE OF CHROMOSOMES5 (SMC5)-SMC6 complex and is accomplished predominantly by synthesis-dependent strand-annealing homologous recombination. Here, we provide insight into the response mechanism for coping with the genotoxic effects of zebularine and identify several components of the zebularine-induced DNA damage repair pathway.

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Liu, C. H., Finke, A., Díaz, M., Rozhon, W., Poppenberger, B., Baubec, T., & Pecinka, A. (2015). Repair of DNA damage induced by the cytidine analog zebularine requires ATR and ATM in arabidopsis. Plant Cell, 27(6), 1788–1800. https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.114.135467

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