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Publication : Dephosphorylation enables the recruitment of 53BP1 to double-strand DNA breaks.

First Author  Lee DH Year  2014
Journal  Mol Cell Volume  54
Issue  3 Pages  512-25
PubMed ID  24703952 Mgi Jnum  J:213141
Mgi Id  MGI:5582968 Doi  10.1016/j.molcel.2014.03.020
Citation  Lee DH, et al. (2014) Dephosphorylation enables the recruitment of 53BP1 to double-strand DNA breaks. Mol Cell 54(3):512-25
abstractText  Excluding 53BP1 from chromatin is required to attenuate the DNA damage response during mitosis, yet the functional relevance and regulation of this exclusion are unclear. Here we show that 53BP1 is phosphorylated during mitosis on two residues, T1609 and S1618, located in its well-conserved ubiquitination-dependent recruitment (UDR) motif. Phosphorylating these sites blocks the interaction of the UDR motif with mononuclesomes containing ubiquitinated histone H2A and impedes binding of 53BP1 to mitotic chromatin. Ectopic recruitment of 53BP1-T1609A/S1618A to mitotic DNA lesions was associated with significant mitotic defects that could be reversed by inhibiting nonhomologous end-joining. We also reveal that protein phosphatase complex PP4C/R3beta dephosphorylates T1609 and S1618 to allow the recruitment of 53BP1 to chromatin in G1 phase. Our results identify key sites of 53BP1 phosphorylation during mitosis, identify the counteracting phosphatase complex that restores the potential for DDR during interphase, and establish the physiological importance of this regulation.
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