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Resolution: standard / high Figure 2.
Chromatin modifications and their consequences in response to lesions that are repaired
by NER. Induction of NER-lesions (by e.g. UV-light), results in three chromatin-associated
responses: checkpoint signalling, transcription inhibition and DNA repair, of which
the latter includes the postulated “access, repair, restore” model [133]. Checkpoint
signalling involves phosphorylation of H2AX by ATR, ubiquitination of H2A (H2A-Ub)
and methylated lysine residues H3K79 and H4K20. H2A-Ub and H3K79me/H4K20me are likely
involved in checkpoint signalling upon NER activation, analogous to the DSB-response
where H2A ubiquitination by RNF8 is required for the binding of checkpoint protein
53BP1 to H3K79me/H4K20me. Dephosphorylation of residues S10 and T11 of H3, possibly
involving HMGN1, might contribute to transcription inhibition upon NER-activation
and allow acetylation of H3K9, suggested to induce an open chromatin conformation
enhancing access of the repair machinery to DNA. Other chromatin remodelling events
promoting access to DNA repair proteins are ubiquitination of H3 and H4 by DDB2, acetylation
of H3K14 and H4 by GCN5 and possibly p300, nucleosome sliding by ACF and nucleosome
removal by SWI/SNF. After the lesion has been repaired, reincorporation of histones
by CAF1 and possibly FACT or NAP1L1 restores the chromatin to its pre-damage conformation.
Question marks indicate speculative activities.
Dinant et al. Epigenetics & Chromatin 2008 1:9 doi:10.1186/1756-8935-1-9 |