WRN Interacts Physically and Functionally with the Recombination Mediator Protein RAD52

Werner syndrome (WS) is a premature aging disorder that predisposes affected individuals to cancer development. The affected gene, WRN, encodes an RecQ homologue whose precise biological function remains elusive. Altered DNA recombination is a hallmark of WS cells suggesting that WRN plays an import...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2003-09, Vol.278 (38), p.36476-36486
Hauptverfasser: Baynton, Kathy, Otterlei, Marit, Bjørås, Magnar, von Kobbe, Cayetano, Bohr, Vilhelm A., Seeberg, Erling
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Werner syndrome (WS) is a premature aging disorder that predisposes affected individuals to cancer development. The affected gene, WRN, encodes an RecQ homologue whose precise biological function remains elusive. Altered DNA recombination is a hallmark of WS cells suggesting that WRN plays an important role in these pathways. Here we report a novel physical and functional interaction between WRN and the homologous recombination mediator protein RAD52. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) analyses show that WRN and RAD52 form a complex in vivo that co-localizes in foci associated with arrested replication forks. Biochemical studies demonstrate that RAD52 both inhibits and enhances WRN helicase activity in a DNA structure-dependent manner, whereas WRN increases the efficiency of RAD52-mediated strand annealing between non-duplex DNA and homologous sequences contained within a double-stranded plasmid. These results suggest that coordinated WRN and RAD52 activities are involved in replication fork rescue after DNA damage.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M303885200