FAN1



Robert Goold, Joseph Hamilton, Thomas Menneteau, Michael Flower, Emma L Bunting, Sarah G Aldous, Antonio Porro, José R Vicente, Nicholas D Allen, Hilary Wilkinson, Gillian P Bates, Alessandro A Sartori, Konstantinos Thalassinos, Gabriel Balmus*, Sarah J Tabrizi*
Cell Reports (2021) 

Abstract

CAG repeat expansion in the HTT gene drives Huntington’s disease (HD) pathogenesis and is modulated by DNA damage repair pathways. In this context, the interaction between FAN1, a DNA-structure-specific nuclease, and MLH1, member of the DNA mismatch repair pathway (MMR), is not defined. Here, we identify a highly conserved SPYF motif at the N terminus of FAN1 that binds to MLH1. Our data support a model where FAN1 has two distinct functions to stabilize CAG repeats. On one hand, it binds MLH1 to restrict its recruitment by MSH3, thus inhibiting the assembly of a functional MMR complex that would otherwise promote CAG repeat expansion. On the other hand, it promotes accurate repair via its nuclease activity. These data highlight a potential avenue for HD therapeutics in attenuating somatic expansion.


featured in Cell Reports: News and Views: SPYing on triplet repeat expansions: Insights into FAN1-MLH1 interaction and regulation by Robert S. Lahue

The DNA repair proteins FAN1 and MLH1 have opposing effects on triplet repeat expansions. New studies by Goold et al. (2021) and Porro et al. (2021) pinpoint interactions between FAN1 and MLH1 that cross-regulate each other’s activities.