Litcius/Paper detail

Transcriptional regulation and chromatin dynamics at DNA double-strand breaks

Sunwoo Min, Jae‐Hoon Ji, Yungyeong Heo, Hyeseong Cho

2022Experimental & Molecular Medicine30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In eukaryotic cells, DNA damage can occur at any time and at any chromatin locus, including loci at which active transcription is taking place. DNA double-strand breaks affect chromatin integrity and elicit a DNA damage response to facilitate repair of the DNA lesion. Actively transcribed genes near DNA lesions are transiently suppressed by crosstalk between DNA damage response factors and polycomb repressive complexes. Epigenetic modulation of the chromatin environment also contributes to efficient DNA damage response signaling and transcriptional repression. On the other hand, RNA transcripts produced in the G1 phase, as well as the active chromatin context of the lesion, appear to drive homologous recombination repair. Here, we discuss how the ISWI family of chromatin remodeling factors coordinates the DNA damage response and transcriptional repression, especially in transcriptionally active regions, highlighting the direct modulation of the epigenetic environment.

Topics & Concepts

ChromatinDNA damageBiologyEpigeneticsCell biologyDNA repairChromatin remodelingDNAGeneticsGeneDNA Repair MechanismsPARP inhibition in cancer therapyGenomics and Chromatin Dynamics