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Article Dans Une Revue Plant Physiology Année : 2018

The linker histone GH1-HMGA1 is involved in telomere stability and DNA damage repair

Résumé

Despite intensive searches, few proteins involved in telomere homeostasis have been identified in plants. Here, we used pull-down assays to identify potential telomeric interactors in the model plant species Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). We identified the candidate protein GH1-HMGA1 (also known as HON4), an uncharacterized linker histone protein of the High Mobility Group Protein A (HMGA) family in plants. HMGAs are architectural transcription factors and have been suggested to function in DNA damage repair, but their precise biological roles remain unclear. Here, we show that GH1-HMGA1 is required for efficient DNA damage repair and telomere integrity in Arabidopsis. GH1-HMGA1 mutants exhibit developmental and growth defects, accompanied by ploidy defects, increased telomere dysfunction-induced foci, mitotic anaphase bridges, and degraded telomeres. Furthermore, mutants have a higher sensitivity to genotoxic agents such as mitomycin C and γ-irradiation. Our work also suggests that GH1-HMGA1 is involved directly in the repair process by allowing the completion of homologous recombination.

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Génétique
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Dates et versions

inserm-01904862 , version 1 (29-05-2020)

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Citer

Cyril Charbonnel, Oleh Rymarenko, Olivier da Ines, Fatiha Benyahya, Charles I. White, et al.. The linker histone GH1-HMGA1 is involved in telomere stability and DNA damage repair. Plant Physiology, 2018, 177 (1), pp.311-327. ⟨10.1104/pp.17.01789⟩. ⟨inserm-01904862⟩
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