Abstract

The repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) requires open, flexible chromatin domains. The NuA4-Tip60 complex creates these flexible chromatin structures by exchanging histone H2A.Z onto nucleosomes and promoting acetylation of histone H4. Here, we demonstrate that the accumulation of H2A.Z on nucleosomes at DSBs is transient, and that rapid eviction of H2A.Z is required for DSB repair. Anp32e, an H2A.Z chaperone that interacts with the C-terminal docking domain of H2A.Z, is rapidly recruited to DSBs. Anp32e functions to remove H2A.Z from nucleosomes, so that H2A.Z levels return to basal within 10 min of DNA damage. Further, H2A.Z removal by Anp32e disrupts inhibitory interactions between the histone H4 tail and the nucleosome surface, facilitating increased acetylation of histone H4 following DNA damage. When H2A.Z removal by Anp32e is blocked, nucleosomes at DSBs retain elevated levels of H2A.Z, and assume a more stable, hypoacetylated conformation. Further, loss of Anp32e leads to increased CtIP-dependent end resection, accumulation of single-stranded DNA, and an increase in repair by the alternative nonhomologous end joining pathway. Exchange of H2A.Z onto the chromatin and subsequent rapid removal by Anp32e are therefore critical for creating open, acetylated nucleosome structures and for controlling end resection by CtIP. Dynamic modulation of H2A.Z exchange and removal by Anp32e reveals the importance of the nucleosome surface and nucleosome dynamics in processing the damaged chromatin template during DSB repair.

Highlights

  • Histone chaperone Anp32e removes H2A.Z from DNA double-strand breaks and promotes nucleosome reorganization and DNA repair

  • DNA is wrapped around nucleosomes, so that repairing double-strand breaks (DSBs) requires significant nucleosome reorganization

  • The dynamic exchange and removal of H2A.Z by Anp32e is critical for chromatin reorganization at DSBs

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Summary

Introduction

Histone chaperone Anp32e removes H2A.Z from DNA double-strand breaks and promotes nucleosome reorganization and DNA repair. The repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), which cleave the DNA backbone, requires remodeling of the local chromatin architecture This reorganization of the chromatin is important for promoting access to the site of damage, for creating a template for the repair machinery, and for repackaging the chromatin and resetting the epigenetic landscape following repair. The p400 ATPase promotes exchange of H2A for the histone variant H2A.Z [13, 17] This increase in H2A.Z at DSBs promotes acetylation of histone H4 by the Tip, creating open, flexible chromatin at sites of DNA damage [5, 11, 14]. Failure to remove H2A.Z leads to defects in DSB repair, including a loss of H4 acetylation, defects in nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ), and increased end resection of DSBs

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