MYC multimers shield stalled replication forks from RNA polymerase

Nature. 2022 Dec;612(7938):148-155. doi: 10.1038/s41586-022-05469-4. Epub 2022 Nov 23.

Abstract

Oncoproteins of the MYC family drive the development of numerous human tumours1. In unperturbed cells, MYC proteins bind to nearly all active promoters and control transcription by RNA polymerase II2,3. MYC proteins can also coordinate transcription with DNA replication4,5 and promote the repair of transcription-associated DNA damage6, but how they exert these mechanistically diverse functions is unknown. Here we show that MYC dissociates from many of its binding sites in active promoters and forms multimeric, often sphere-like structures in response to perturbation of transcription elongation, mRNA splicing or inhibition of the proteasome. Multimerization is accompanied by a global change in the MYC interactome towards proteins involved in transcription termination and RNA processing. MYC multimers accumulate on chromatin immediately adjacent to stalled replication forks and surround FANCD2, ATR and BRCA1 proteins, which are located at stalled forks7,8. MYC multimerization is triggered in a HUWE16 and ubiquitylation-dependent manner. At active promoters, MYC multimers block antisense transcription and stabilize FANCD2 association with chromatin. This limits DNA double strand break formation during S-phase, suggesting that the multimerization of MYC enables tumour cells to proliferate under stressful conditions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Binding Sites
  • Chromatin / genetics
  • DNA Breaks, Double-Stranded
  • DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases* / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Promoter Regions, Genetic / genetics
  • RNA Polymerase II / metabolism
  • RNA, Messenger / biosynthesis
  • S Phase
  • Transcription, Genetic
  • Tumor Suppressor Proteins / metabolism
  • Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases / metabolism

Substances

  • Chromatin
  • DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases
  • HUWE1 protein, human
  • RNA Polymerase II
  • Tumor Suppressor Proteins
  • Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases
  • MYC protein, human
  • BRCA1 protein, human
  • FANCD2 protein, human
  • ATR protein, human
  • RNA, Messenger