Chromatin assembly coupled to DNA repair: a new role for chromatin assembly factor I.

Pierre-Henri L Gaillard, E M Martini, P D Kaufman, B Stillman, E Moustacchi, G Almouzni
Author Information
  1. Pierre-Henri L Gaillard: Institut Curie/Research section UMR144 du CNRS, Paris, France.

Abstract

DNA repair in the eukaryotic cell disrupts local chromatin organization. To investigate whether the resetting of nucleosomal arrays can be linked to the repair process, we developed model systems, with both Xenopus egg extract and human cell extracts, to follow repair and chromatin assembly in parallel on circular DNA templates. Both systems were able to carry out nucleotide excision repair of DNA lesions. We observed that UV-dependent DNA synthesis occurs simultaneously with chromatin assembly, strongly indicating a mechanistic coupling between the two processes. A complementation assay established that chromatin assembly factor I (CAF1) is necessary for this repair associated chromatin formation.

MeSH Term

Animals
Cell Line
Chromatin
Chromatin Assembly Factor-1
Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone
DNA Repair
DNA-Binding Proteins
Female
Humans
In Vitro Techniques
Models, Biological
Oocytes
Plasmids
Recombinant Proteins
Ultraviolet Rays
Xenopus

Chemicals

Chromatin
Chromatin Assembly Factor-1
Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone
DNA-Binding Proteins
Recombinant Proteins

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0chromatinDNArepairassemblycellsystemsfactoreukaryoticdisruptslocalorganizationinvestigatewhetherresettingnucleosomalarrayscanlinkedprocessdevelopedmodelXenopuseggextracthumanextractsfollowparallelcirculartemplatesablecarrynucleotideexcisionlesionsobservedUV-dependentsynthesisoccurssimultaneouslystronglyindicatingmechanisticcouplingtwoprocessescomplementationassayestablishedCAF1necessaryassociatedformationChromatincoupledrepair:newroleI

Similar Articles

Cited By