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A region of human BRCA2 containing multiple BRC repeats promotes RAD51-mediated strand exchange

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Shivji, MKK 
Davies, OR 
Savill, JM 
Bates, DL 

Abstract

Human BRCA2, a breast and ovarian cancer suppressor, binds to the DNA recombinase RAD51 through eight conserved BRC repeats, motifs of similar to 30 residues, dispersed across a large region of the protein. BRCA2 is essential for homologous recombination in vivo, but isolated BRC repeat peptides can prevent the assembly of RAD51 into active nucleoprotein filaments in vitro, suggesting a model in which BRCA2 sequesters RAD51 in undamaged cells, and promotes recombinase function after DNA damage. How BRCA2 might fulfill these dual functions is unclear. We have purified a fragment of human BRCA2 (BRCA2(BRC1-8)) with 1127 residues spanning all 8 BRC repeats but excluding the C-terminal DNA-binding domain (BRCA2(CTD)). BRCA2(BRC1-8) binds RAD51 nucleoprotein filaments in a ternary complex, indicating it may organize RAD51 on DNA. Human RAD51 is relatively ineffective in vitro at strand exchange between homologous DNA molecules unless non-physiological ions like NH+4 are present. In an ionic milieu more typical of the mammalian nucleus, BRCA2(BRC1-8) stimulates RAD51-mediated strand exchange, suggesting it may be an essential co-factor in vivo. Thus, the human BRC repeats, embedded within their surronding sequences as an eight-repeat unit, mediate homologous recombination independent of the BRCA2(CTD) through a previously unrecognized role in control of RAD51 activity.

Description

Keywords

DNA-repair, stability, SEQUENCE, INSIGHTS, replication, homologous recombination, FILAMENT, CANCER SUSCEPTIBILITY GENE, HUMAN RAD51 PROTEIN, POLARITY

Journal Title

Nucleic Acids Research

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0305-1048
1362-4962

Volume Title

34

Publisher

Oxford University Press
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (G0600332)
Medical Research Council (G0700651)
Medical Research Council (G9900064)
Wellcome Trust (071102/Z/03/Z)
This work was supported by a Senior Non-Clinical Fellowship to L.P. from the Wellcome Trust and a BBSRC PhD studentship to O.R.D., and in ARV's laboratory by the Medical Research Council and a Cancer Research UK PhD studentship to D.L.B. Funding to pay the Open Access publication charges for this article was provided by the Medical Research Council.