Open Access
Open access
Nature Communications, volume 13, issue 1, publication number 5295

Multi-pathway DNA-repair reporters reveal competition between end-joining, single-strand annealing and homologous recombination at Cas9-induced DNA double-strand breaks

Bert van de Kooij 1, 2
Alex Kruswick 2
Haico van Attikum 1
M. Yaffe 2, 3, 4
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2022-09-08
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR4.887
CiteScore24.9
Impact factor14.7
ISSN20411723
General Chemistry
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Multidisciplinary
General Physics and Astronomy
Abstract
DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) are repaired by multiple distinct pathways, with outcomes ranging from error-free repair to mutagenesis and genomic loss. DSB-repair pathway cross-talk and compensation is incompletely understood, despite its importance for genomic stability, oncogenesis, and genome editing using CRISPR/Cas9. To address this, we constructed and validated three fluorescent Cas9-based reporters, named DSB-Spectrum, that simultaneously quantify the contribution of multiple DNA repair pathways at a DSB. DSB-Spectrum reporters distinguish between DSB-repair by error-free canonical non-homologous end-joining (c-NHEJ) versus homologous recombination (HR; reporter 1), mutagenic repair versus HR (reporter 2), and mutagenic end-joining versus single strand annealing (SSA) versus HR (reporter 3). Using these reporters, we show that inhibiting the c-NHEJ factor DNA-PKcs increases repair by HR, but also substantially increases mutagenic SSA. Our data indicate that SSA-mediated DSB-repair also occurs at endogenous genomic loci, driven by Alu elements or homologous gene regions. Finally, we demonstrate that long-range end-resection factors DNA2 and Exo1 promote SSA and reduce HR, when both pathways compete for the same substrate. These new Cas9-based DSB-Spectrum reporters facilitate the comprehensive analysis of repair pathway crosstalk and DSB-repair outcome. Correct repair of broken DNA molecules is required to prevent potentially oncogenic mutations. To study repair fidelity and mechanism, van de Kooij et al. developed single cell reporters that detect if DNA breaks are fixed by error-free or mutagenic repair.
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