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      The global role for Cdc13 and Yku70 in preventing telomere resection across the genome

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          Abstract

          Yeast Cdc13 protein (related to human CTC1) maintains telomere stability by preventing 5′-3′ end resection. While Cdc13 and Yku70/Yku80 proteins appear to prevent excessive resection, their combined contribution to maintenance of telomere ends across the genome and their relative roles at specific ends of different chromosomes have not been addressable because Cdc13 and Yku70/Yku80 double mutants are sickly. Using our PFGE-shift approach where large resected molecules have slower pulse field gel electrophoresis mobilities, along with methods for maintaining viable double mutants, we address end-resection on most chromosomes as well as telomere end differences. In this global approach to looking at ends of most chromosomes, we identify chromosomes with 1-end resections and end-preferences. We also identify chromosomes with resection at both ends, previously not possible. 10–20% of chromosomes exhibit PFGE-shift when cdc13-1 cells are switched to restrictive temperature (37 °C). In yku70Δ cdc13-1 mutants, there is a telomere resection “storm” with approximately half the chromosomes experiencing at least 1-end resection, ~10 kb/telomere, due to exonuclease1 and many exhibiting 2-end resection. Unlike for random internal chromosome breaks, resection of telomere ends is not coordinated. Telomere restitution at permissive temperature is rapid (< 1 h) in yku70Δ cdc13-1 cells. Surprisingly, survival can be high although strain background dependent. Given large amount of resected telomeres, we examined associated proteins. Up to 90% of cells have ≥1 Rfa1 (RPA) focus and 60% have multiple foci when ~30–40 telomeres/cell are resected. The ends are dispersed in the nucleus suggesting wide distribution of resected telomeres across nuclear space. The previously reported Rad52 nuclear centers of repair for random DSBs also appear in cells with many resected telomere ends, suggesting a Rad52 commonality to the organization of single strand ends and/or limitation on interactions of single-strand ends with Rad52.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          101139138
          30141
          DNA Repair (Amst)
          DNA Repair (Amst.)
          DNA repair
          1568-7864
          1568-7856
          31 May 2018
          29 November 2017
          February 2018
          06 June 2018
          : 62
          : 8-17
          Affiliations
          [a ]Chromosome Stability Group, Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), National Institutes of Health, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709, United States
          [b ]University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, 5117 Centre Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, United States
          Author notes
          [* ]Corresponding author. resnick@ 123456niehs.nih.gov (M.A. Resnick)
          Article
          PMC5989325 PMC5989325 5989325 nihpa971399
          10.1016/j.dnarep.2017.11.010
          5989325
          29247743
          d202a78c-c930-4dac-837a-f7563191369b
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Yeast,Telomere,Resection,Yku,Rad52,Foci
          Yeast, Telomere, Resection, Yku, Rad52, Foci

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