Eukaryotic cells often face damage to their DNA, including double-strand breaks (DSBs), which need proper repair to maintain the cell’s health. One highly accurate repair process is called homologous recombination. This error-free process uses an undamaged homologous DNA region as a template to repair the break. Given the vast size of human genomes, a random search for these matching regions would be highly inefficient. Indeed, homologous recombination is slower and less efficient when homologous DNA regions are on different chromosomes. However, after DNA replication, thanks the presence of an exact copy of each chromosome, homologous recombination becomes more efficient between the copies, called sister chromatids, due to their specific organization. Cohesin complexes play a crucial role in this organization, thus supporting more effective DNA repair.
Cohesin complexes play two key roles in organizing sister chromatids: they create stable connections between them and form dynamic DNA loops within each chromatid. These loops shape specific domains that influence various processes in the nucleus, including DNA repair. The stable links formed by cohesin are crucial for efficient homologous recombination, as they help locate matching DNA sequences and restructure the repair sites.
However, the exact function of this three-dimensional DNA organization in the repair process has remained unclear until now.
The goal of this project was to understand how the three-dimensional organization of sister chromatids contributed to homologous recombination repair. Specifically, it aimed to 1) explore how the structure of sister chromatids affected and was affected by the repair process, and 2) identify key molecular factors that regulated chromosome conformation for efficient DNA repair.
By combining microscopy- and sequencing-based assays, together with a novel sister chromatid sensitive Hi-C assay developed in the hosting lab, the Fellow has identified a role for sister chromatid organization, regulated by both cohesive and loop-extruding cohesin, in controlling the range and dimensionality of the homology search step during homologous recombination in human cells.