Homeostatic nuclear RAGE-ATM interaction is essential for efficient DNA repair

  • Varun Kumar
  • Thomas Fleming
  • Stefan Terjung
  • Christian Gorzelanny
  • Christoffer Gebhardt
  • Raman Agrawal
  • Marcus A Mall
  • Julia Ranzinger
  • Martin Zeier
  • Thati Madhusudhan
  • Satish Ranjan
  • Berend Isermann
  • Arthur Liesz
  • Divija Deshpande
  • Hans-Ulrich Häring
  • Subrata K Biswas
  • Paul R Reynolds
  • Hans-Peter Hammes
  • Rainer Peperkok
  • Peter Angel
  • Stephan Herzig
  • Peter P Nawroth

Abstract

The integrity of genome is a prerequisite for healthy life. Indeed, defects in DNA repair have been associated with several human diseases, including tissue-fibrosis, neurodegeneration and cancer. Despite decades of extensive research, the spatio-mechanical processes of double-strand break (DSB)-repair, especially the auxiliary factor(s) that can stimulate accurate and timely repair, have remained elusive. Here, we report an ATM-kinase dependent, unforeseen function of the nuclear isoform of the Receptor for Advanced Glycation End-products (nRAGE) in DSB-repair. RAGE is phosphorylated at Serine376 and Serine389 by the ATM kinase and is recruited to the site of DNA-DSBs via an early DNA damage response. nRAGE preferentially co-localized with the MRE11 nuclease subunit of the MRN complex and orchestrates its nucleolytic activity to the ATR kinase signaling. This promotes efficient RPA2S4-S8 and CHK1S345 phosphorylation and thereby prevents cellular senescence, IPF and carcinoma formation. Accordingly, loss of RAGE causatively linked to perpetual DSBs signaling, cellular senescence and fibrosis. Importantly, in a mouse model of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (RAGE-/-), reconstitution of RAGE efficiently restored DSB-repair and reversed pathological anomalies. Collectively, this study identifies nRAGE as a master regulator of DSB-repair, the absence of which orchestrates persistent DSB signaling to senescence, tissue-fibrosis and oncogenesis.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0305-1048
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 13.10.2017
PubMed 28977635