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      Sequences in PSF/SFPQ mediate radioresistance and recruitment of PSF/SFPQ-containing complexes to DNA damage sites in human cells.

      DNA Repair
      Base Sequence, Cell Survival, genetics, radiation effects, DNA Damage, DNA Repair, Gene Expression Regulation, HeLa Cells, Humans, Lasers, MicroRNAs, Nuclear Matrix-Associated Proteins, metabolism, Octamer Transcription Factors, Phenotype, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Protein Subunits, chemistry, Protein Transport, RNA-Binding Proteins

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          Abstract

          PSF (gene name SFPQ) is a member of a small family of proteins with dual functions in RNA biogenesis and DNA repair. PSF and PSF-containing complexes stimulate double-strand break repair in cell free systems, most likely via direct interaction with the repair substrate. Prior in vitro studies are, however, insufficient to demonstrate whether PSF contributes to DNA repair in living cells. Here, we investigate the effect of miRNA-mediated PSF knockdown in human (HeLa) cells. We find that PSF is essential for reproductive viability. To circumvent this and investigate the DNA damage sensitivity phenotype, we established a genetic rescue assay based on co-transfection of PSF miRNA and mutant PSF expression constructs. Mutational analysis suggests that sequences required for viability and radioresistance are partially separable, and that the latter requires a unique N-terminal PSF domain. As an independent means to investigate PSF sequences involved in DNA repair, we established an assay based on real-time relocalization of PSF-containing complexes to sites of dense, laser-induced DNA damage in living cells. We show that relocalization is driven by sequences in PSF, rather than its dimerization partner, p54(nrb)/NONO, and that sequences required for relocalization reside in the same N-terminal domain that contributes to radioresistance. Further evidence for the importance of PSF sequences in mediating relocalization is provided by observations that PSF promotes relocalization of a third protein, PSPC1, under conditions where p54(nrb) is limiting. Together, these observations support the model derived from prior biochemical studies that PSF influences repair via direct, local, interaction with the DNA substrate. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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