Abstract

Beta human papillomavirus (β-HPV) are hypothesized to make DNA damage more mutagenic and potentially more carcinogenic. Double strand breaks (DSBs) are the most deleterious DNA lesion. They are typically repaired by homologous recombination (HR) or non-homologous end joining (NHEJ). HR occurs after DNA replication while NHEJ can occur at any point in the cell cycle. HR and NHEJ are not thought to occur in the same cell at the same time. HR is restricted to cells in phases of the cell cycle where homologous templates are available, while NHEJ occurs primarily during G1. β-HPV type 8 protein E6 (8E6) attenuates both repair pathways. We use a series of immunofluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry experiments to better define the impact of this attenuation. We found that 8E6 causes colocalization of HR factors (RPA70 and RAD51) with an NHEJ factor (activated DNA-PKcs or pDNA-PKcs) at persistent DSBs. 8E6 also causes RAD51 foci to form during G1. The initiation of NHEJ and HR at the same lesion could lead to antagonistic DNA end processing. Further, HR cannot be readily completed in an error-free manner during G1. Both aberrant repair events would cause deletions. To determine if these mutations were occurring, we used next generation sequencing of the 200kb surrounding a CAS9-induced DSB. 8E6 caused a 21-fold increase in deletions. Chemical and genetic inhibition of p300 as well as an 8E6 mutant that is incapable of destabilizing p300 demonstrates that 8E6 is acting via p300 destabilization. More specific chemical inhibitors of DNA repair provided mechanistic insight by mimicking 8E6-induced dysregulation of DNA repair in a virus-free system. Specifically, inhibition of NHEJ causes RAD51 foci to form in G1 and colocalization of RAD51 with pDNA-PKcs.

Highlights

  • Beta genus of human papillomaviruses (β-HPVs) are frequently found in human skin [1,2]

  • Our previous work shows that a master transcription regulator, p300, facilitates two major DNA double strand break (DSB) repair pathways: non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) and homologous recombination (HR)

  • We show that 8 protein E6 (8E6) allows HR to initiate in G1, suggesting that NHEJ starts but fails before HR is initiated at the same DSB

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Summary

Introduction

Beta genus of human papillomaviruses (β-HPVs) are frequently found in human skin [1,2]. HPV replication requires actively proliferating cells and the replication machinery of the host cells. This puts β-HPV infections in conflict with the cell cycle arrest associated with the repair of UV photolesions that frequently occur in skin [3,4,5,6]. As a mechanism to counter cell cycle arrest, some β-HPVs hinder the cellular response to DNA damage [7,8,9]. 8E6 reduces ATM and ATR activation in response to UV [8] This hinders UV damage repair, making UV-induced pyrimidine dimers more persistent and UV more likely to cause double stranded DNA breaks (DSBs) [14]

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