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Originally published In Press as doi:10.1074/jbc.M605121200 on October 10, 2006

J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 281, Issue 51, 39517-39533, December 22, 2006
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RPA2 Is a Direct Downstream Target for ATR to Regulate the S-phase Checkpoint*Formula

Erin Olson{ddagger}, Christian J. Nievera{ddagger}, Vitaly Klimovich§, Ellen Fanning§, and Xiaohua Wu{ddagger}1

From the {ddagger}Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine, The Scripps Research Institute, La, Jolla, California 92037 and the §Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee 37232

Received for publication, May 30, 2006 , and in revised form, October 10, 2006.


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Upon DNA damage, replication is inhibited by the S-phase checkpoint. ATR (ataxia telangiectasia mutated- and Rad3-related) is specifically involved in the inhibition of replicon initiation when cells are treated with DNA damage-inducing agents that stall replication forks, but the mechanism by which it acts to prevent replication is not yet fully understood. We observed that RPA2 is phosphorylated on chromatin in an ATR-dependent manner when replication forks are stalled. Mutation of the ATR-dependent phosphorylation sites in RPA2 leads to a defect in the down-regulation of DNA synthesis following treatment with UV radiation, although ATR activation is not affected. Threonine 21 and serine 33, two residues among several phosphorylation sites in the amino terminus of RPA2, are specifically required for the UV-induced, ATR-mediated inhibition of DNA replication. RPA2 mutant alleles containing phospho-mimetic mutations at ATR-dependent phosphorylation sites have an impaired ability to associate with replication centers, indicating that ATR phosphorylation of RPA2 directly affects the replication function of RPA. Our studies suggest that in response to UV-induced DNA damage, ATR rapidly phosphorylates RPA2, disrupting its association with replication centers in the S-phase and contributing to the inhibition of DNA replication.


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Cell cycle checkpoints are surveillance mechanisms to monitor chromatin structures and arrest the cell cycle when DNA damage is detected (1, 2). Defects in checkpoint pathways lead to significant genome instability. Checkpoints are operated by DNA damage signal transduction pathways that send damage signals from sensor proteins through transducing proteins to downstream effector proteins, so that different cellular responses, including cell cycle arrest and damage repair, can be activated. The protein kinases, ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM),2 and ATM- and Rad3-related (ATR), are two essential transducing proteins required to mediate checkpoint responses (3).

The S-phase checkpoint inhibits ongoing DNA replication as soon as DNA lesions are detected, allowing time for DNA repair to take place before replication continues (4, 5). The ionizing radiation (IR)-induced S-phase checkpoint response is attenuated in ATM-deficient cells (6, 7), whereas ATR is required to inhibit replication in response to UV-induced DNA damage (8). In the IR-induced S-phase checkpoint, two parallel pathways mediated by Chk2-Cdc25A and Nbs1/Mre11/Rad50, respectively, have been described to mediate ATM-dependent replication inhibition (6). However, the detailed mechanisms of how ATR regulates its downstream effectors to control replication are not clear.

RPA is a heterotrimeric protein complex that binds specifically to single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) (9). It is composed of three subunits, RPA1 (70 kDa), RPA2 (32 kDa), and RPA3 (14 kDa), and plays multiple roles in DNA metabolism (10, 11). RPA is required for DNA replication initiation, as well as replication elongation (12). At the onset of DNA replication, RPA is loaded onto chromatin after the binding of Cdc45 to origins (13). RPA is needed for subsequent loading of DNA polymerase {alpha} and other replication proteins to initiate DNA replication (14). After DNA replication begins, RPA moves with replication forks, stabilizing ssDNA and assisting in DNA synthesis. In addition to its replication function, RPA is also known to play essential roles in damage repair and recombination (15-17). It has been suggested that RPA-bound ssDNA may be involved in the activation of ATR following DNA damage (18, 19). However, recent studies also indicate that RPA may not be absolutely required for ATR activation, and alternative pathways may exist (20). The interaction of RPA with ATRIP (ATR-interacting protein) is important for promoting recruitment of ATR/ATRIP to damage-induced foci, but may be dispensable for ATR activation to phosphorylate Chk1 (21, 22).

When cells enter S-phase, RPA is phosphorylated, primarily on the RPA2 subunit at the cyclin-dependent kinase sites (23-25). Upon DNA damage, additional sites on RPA2 are phosphorylated (26-28). In response to UV or hydroxyurea (HU) treatment specifically, seven additional residues clustered in the extreme amino terminus of RPA2 have been identified as potential sites of RPA2 phosphorylation (29, 30). In mammalian cells, the PI3-like kinases, including DNA-PK, ATM, and ATR, are implicated in the phosphorylation of RPA2 following DNA damage. DNA-PK plays an important role in IR-induced damage repair, particularly in nonhomologous end joining (31). DNA-PK interacts with RPA and phosphorylates RPA2 both in vivo and in vitro (28, 32-34). RPA2 phosphorylation induced by a high dose of IR also depends on ATM (27, 35). The involvement of ATR in RPA2 phosphorylation, however, is not quite clear. It has been reported that RPA2 is a good substrate of ATR in vitro (36), but whether ATR phosphorylates RPA2 in vivo and whether this phosphorylation affects RPA function following DNA damage are unknown. The observation that caffeine treatment does not further reduce RPA2 phosphorylation in ATM-deficient cells has led to the conclusion that ATR phosphorylation of RPA2 may not be relevant in vivo (37).

Here we show that RPA2 is phosphorylated on chromatin in an ATR-dependent manner when cells are treated with DNA damage-inducing agents that block replication. We demonstrate that not only does ATR phosphorylate RPA2 directly in vitro, but RPA2 phosphorylation on chromatin after UV or HU treatment in vivo is dependent on ATR protein levels and on its kinase activity. Mutations at the ATR-dependent phosphorylation sites of RPA2 specifically impair ATR-mediated replication inhibition following UV treatment. Analysis of phosphomimetic mutants of RPA2 at ATR phosphorylation sites suggests that ATR-dependent RPA2 phosphorylation likely prevents RPA association with replication centers. These studies suggest that RPA2 is a physiologically relevant substrate of ATR in vivo and is a direct effector of ATR to inhibit replication following UV-induced DNA damage.


    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Cell Culture, Retroviral Infections, and shRNA—U2OS, 293T, GM847, or GM847/ATR-KD cells were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 5% fetal bovine serum and 5% super calf serum. To induce expression of ATR-KD in the GM847 fibroblasts, 1 µg/ml of doxycycline was added to the media 24 h prior to chromatin isolation (38). HA-tagged RPA2 or mutant forms of RPA2 were introduced into U2OS cells by retroviral infection followed by selection of puromycin-resistant cells. Silencing of endogenous RPA2 in these cells was accomplished by two rounds of retroviral infection using pMKO vector (39) expressing the RPA2 shRNA target sequence, CCUAGUUUCACAAUCUGUUGU, located in the 3'-UTR of the mRNA (40) followed by selection of G418- and hygromycin-resistant cells. Endogenous ATR, ATM, Chk1, and DNA-PK were silenced in U2OS cells by two rounds of retroviral infection using pMKO vector that expressed two different shRNA target sequences. The target sequences used for ATR silencing were AACCUCCGUGAUGUUGCUUGA (41) and CGAGACUUCUGCGGAUUGCAG. The target sequences used for ATM silencing were AACAUACUACUCAAAGACAUU, and GCACCAGUCCAGUAUUGGCUU. The target sequences used to silence Chk1 were AAGCGUGCCGUAGACUGUCCA and AAGUACUCCAGUUCUCAGCCA. The target sequences used for DNA-PK silencing were GGGCGCUAAUCGUACUGAAAC and GAUCGCACCUUACUCUGUUGA (42).

Plasmids, Mutagenesis, and GST Protein Purification—To generate the serine to alanine mutations in RPA2, HA-tagged full-length RPA2 cloned into mammalian expression vector pcDNA3beta was used as template for several rounds of site-directed mutagenesis (Stratagene). HA-tagged wild-type RPA2 and mutant forms generated by site-directed mutagenesis were cloned into the retroviral vector pBabepuro. GST-tagged RPA2 fragments were made by cloning a PCR product generated using wild-type RPA2, or one of the mutant forms of RPA2 as a template, into pGEX4T-1 (Amersham Biosciences). GST fusion proteins were expressed in BL21 Escherichia coli cells after isopropyl 1-thio-beta-D-galactopyranoside induction, purified on glutathione-Sepharose beads (Amersham Biosciences), and eluted with 15 mM glutathione in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0). His-tagged RPA was constructed by cloning a PCR product made using pt11d-RPA, a generous gift from Marc Wold, as a template into pET28b (Novagen). His-tagged RPA containing phospho-mimetic mutations in RPA2 were generated by sitedirected mutagenesis of pET28b-RPA. His-tagged RPA fusion proteins were expressed in BL21 E. coli cells after isopropyl 1-thio-beta-D-galactopyranoside induction and purified on Ni-NTA resin (Qiagen).

Immunoprecipitation and Chromatin Isolation—Cells were lysed in NETN (150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 20 mM Tris-Cl (pH 8.0), 0.5% Nonidet P-40) containing protease and phosphatase inhibitors. Immunoprecipitation was performed by incubating primary antibodies with cell lysates at 4 °C for 4 h, followed by the addition of secondary antibody (MP Biomedicals) and protein A-agarose (Calbiochem) for one additional hour. For Western blot analysis, proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE, transferred to nitrocellulose membranes (Bio-Rad), and incubated overnight in primary antibodies followed by 1 h of incubation in horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies.

For chromatin isolation, cells were washed with PBS, trypsinized, collected, resuspended in CSK buffer (10 mM PIPES (pH 6.8), 100 mM NaCl, 300 mM sucrose, 3 mM MgCl2, 1mM EGTA, 50 mM sodium fluoride, 0.1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 0.1% Triton X-100, and protease inhibitors), and incubated at 4 °C for 5 min. Cytoplasmic proteins were separated from nuclei by low speed centrifugation at 1,300 x g for 5 min. Isolated nuclei were washed once in CSK buffer, lysed in solution B (3 mM EDTA, 0.2 mM EGTA, 1 mM DTT, and protease inhibitors). After centrifugation, the pellet was resuspended in CSK buffer and 2x SDS loading buffer and boiled.

Pulldown Assays—His-tagged RPA wild type (RPA1-RPA2-RPA3 complex) or the RPA complex containing serine or threonine to aspartate mutations at specific residues in RPA2 were purified from E. coli on Ni-NTA resin (Qiagen). Primase subunits were expressed from baculoviruses infected either individually or in different combinations in insect cells. Insect cells were lysed 48 h after infection, and the lysates were combined with RPA-bound Ni-NTA at 4 °C for 4 h. After extensive washing, primase subunits retained on the RPA beads were analyzed by Western blot.

Immunofluorescence—For immunostaining analysis of retrovirally infected U2OS cells, cells grown directly on glass coverslips were washed in PBS and then either fixed directly with 4% formaldehyde in PBS (nonextracted) or extracted first with 0.5% Triton X-100 in PBS for 5 min (extracted), fixed with a modified Streck tissue fixative for 30 min at room temperature, and permeabilized for 15 min at room temperature as described previously (43, 44). Cells were blocked with 5% goat serum in PBS and then stained with primary antibodies (monoclonal anti-RPA1; polyclonal anti-HA) at 4 °C overnight. The following morning, the cells were washed and stained for 1 h at room temperature with rhodamine-conjugated anti-mouse and fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated anti-rabbit secondary antibodies (Jackson ImmunoResearch). The frequency of cells with chromatin-bound HA-RPA2 was determined by counting the number of RPA1-positive staining cells with HA-RPA2 foci after extraction from three independent experiments. To detect damage foci, asynchronized cells were fixed by 70% methanol and 30% acetone at -20 °C for 15 min, followed by immunostaining analysis as described above.

Antibodies—The antibodies used in this study were purchased from Oncogene (ATM, RPA1, and RPA2), Bethyl Laboratories (RPA2-S4/8P and RPA2-S33P), Calbiochem (ATR), Covance (mono-HA), Cell Signaling Technology (pT68-Chk2), R&D Systems (pS317-Chk1), Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Chk1, Chk2, and Ku70), Serotec (DNA-PK), Neomarkers (primase p48 and p58), and Upstate (poly-HA). Monoclonal antibodies 9D5 (recognizing p68) and 1CT 102 and 2CT25 (recognizing p180) were described previously (45).

Kinase Assays—For ATR or Chk1 in vitro kinase assays, pcDNA3 containing FLAG-tagged ATR (a generous gift from R. T. Abraham) or HA-tagged Chk1 (a generous gift from C. H. McGowan) was transiently transfected into 293T cells and immunoprecipitated on anti-FLAG M2-agarose (Sigma) or with an anti-HA antibody and protein A-agarose (Calbiochem), respectively. Immunoprecipitates were extensively washed (three times in NETN and two times in kinase buffer) and then incubated with the glutathione-eluted GST fusion proteins in the presence of [{gamma}-32P]ATP in either ATR kinase buffer (25 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), 50 mM NaCl, 10 mM MnCl2, 10mM MgCl2, 1mM DTT) or Chk1 kinase buffer (25 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), 50 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2B, 1mM DTT) at 30 °C for 30 min. Phosphorylated proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE. Gels were dried and exposed to film. Coomassie-stained gels were used to confirm that equal amounts of substrate proteins were added to the kinase reactions.

UV-resistant DNA Synthesis (UVDS)—Inhibition of DNA synthesis following exposure to UV light was performed by growing U2OS cells in the presence of 0.02 µCi per ml [14C]thymidine for 24 h. Several hours after the removal of [14C]thymidine, cells were either mock-treated or irradiated with 10 J/m2 of UV light, allowed to recover 1 h, and then labeled with 2.5 µCi per ml [3H]thymidine for 15 min. Cells were spotted onto Whatman glass microfiber filters and washed with trichloroacetic acid and 100% ethanol. The filters were allowed to dry, and radioactivity was measured using a liquid scintillation counter and a dual energy program.

Recovery from S-phase Arrest—U2OS cells expressing HA-tagged RPA2 or the HA-tagged RPA2 phospho-mutant with endogenous RPA2 silenced were grown in the presence of 1 mM hydroxyurea for 24 h. To release the cells, they were extensively washed in PBS and put into fresh Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium without hydroxyurea. At specific times following release, cells were trypsinized from the plates and fixed for flow cytometry analysis.

Cellular Viability—Cellular viability was determined in U2OS cells where endogenous RPA2 levels were reduced by retroviral infection of one or two shRNAs directed against the 3'-UTR of the RPA2 mRNA or in U2OS cells that were first infected with either HA-tagged RPA2 or with the HA-tagged RPA2 phospho-mutant, followed by two rounds of retroviral infection of the RPA2 shRNA. Forty eight hours after the final retroviral infection of the RPA2 shRNA, cells from each cell line were counted and plated in triplicate at 1 x 104 cells per plate. Three days later, cells were stained with trypan blue and counted. The experiment was repeated three times, and the average number of surviving cells from each cell line was normalized to the average number of viable, uninfected U2OS cells that were plated as a control for each experiment.


    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
ATR Kinase Activity Is Required for RPA2 Hyperphosphorylation on Chromatin in Response to UV or HU Treatment—Chromatin was isolated from U2OS cells after exposure to UV light or treatment with HU. Consistent with previous reports (18, 46), RPA1 and RPA2 were both recruited to the chromatin (Fig. 1A, compare the soluble versus the chromatin fractions), and several slower migrating forms of RPA2 appeared specifically on the chromatin after UV and HU treatments (Fig. 1A). To demonstrate conclusively that the slower migrating bands of RPA2 detectable after DNA damage were a result of hyperphosphorylation of the protein, chromatin isolated from U2OS cells exposed to UV light or HU was treated with {lambda} phosphatase. Following phosphatase treatment, the mobility of RPA2 reverted to that of RPA2 from mock-treated cells (Fig. 1B and data not shown), indicating that all of the slower migrating forms of RPA2 detected upon UV or HU treatment are phosphorylated forms of RPA2. Notably, exposure to UV light and HU, two DNA damage-inducing agents that stall replication forks, significantly increased RPA recruitment to the chromatin and RPA2 hyperphosphorylation, and this recruitment and phosphorylation were not detectable after 20 Gy of IR treatment (Fig. 1A). Although RPA2 phosphorylation can be induced with an extremely high dose of IR (100 Gy (27, 32)), this result suggested that RPA2 hyperphosphorylation on chromatin is more prevalent when replication forks are stalled than when DNA double strand breaks are introduced.

Because ATR is activated in response to both UV light and HU, we investigated whether RPA recruitment to the chromatin or RPA2 phosphorylation depends on ATR kinase activity. Chromatin was isolated from an SV40-transformed fibroblast cell line GM847 or from GM847 cells expressing a doxycyclineinducible kinase-inactive allele of ATR ((GM847-KD) (47)) after cells were mock-treated, treated with HU, or exposed to UV light. Chk1 phosphorylation at Ser-317 after UV treatment was reduced when the overexpression of ATR-KD was induced (supplemental Fig. 1), suggesting that ATR activity was inhibited. Compared with GM847 cells that had normal ATR kinase activity, cells overexpressing the kinase-inactive allele of ATR (GM847-KD) showed a substantial decrease in RPA2 hyperphosphorylation on the chromatin following UV and HU treatment, as evidenced by the reduction in the hyperphosphorylated form of RPA2 detected by an anti-RPA2 antibody, and the reduction in serine 33 phosphorylation detected using a Ser-33 phospho-specific antibody (Fig. 1C). RPA recruitment to the chromatin was not affected by the overexpression of the kinase-inactive allele of ATR. In fact, there was a significant increase in the unphosphorylated chromatin-bound RPA2 in the GM847-KD cells presumably because of an inability to phosphorylate RPA2 following chromatin loading (Fig. 1C). This result suggests that ATR kinase activity is required for RPA2 hyperphosphorylation, but not for recruitment of RPA to the chromatin following UV and HU treatment.


Figure 1
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FIGURE 1.
ATR is required for rapid phosphorylation of chromatin-associated RPA2 in response to UV or HU treatment. A, the soluble and the chromatin fractions were isolated from U2OS cells that were mocktreated (No), exposed to UV light (30 J/m2, 1 h after), HU (1 mM, 24 h after), or IR (20 Gy, 30 min after) and immunoblotted for RPA1 and RPA2. The phosphorylated forms of RPA2 are indicated by RPA2-P. B, chromatin isolated from U2OS cells was {lambda} phosphatase-treated after mock treatment (No) or exposure to UV light (30 J/m2, 1 h after) and then immunoblotted for RPA2. An antibody to Ku70 was used as a loading control. C, chromatin was isolated from GM847 cells, or from GM847 cells in which a doxycycline-inducible kinase-inactive allele of ATR (KD) was overexpressed following either mock treatment (-), treatment with HU (1 mM, 24 h after), or exposed to UV light (30 J/m2, 1 h after). Chromatin was immunoblotted for RPA2 or Ku70 as a loading control. In the right panel, chromatin was also treated with {lambda} phosphatase and then immunoblotted with an antibody to RPA2, or with a phospho-specific antibody to serine 33 of RPA2 (RPA2-S33P). D, U2OS cells that had been retrovirally infected with vector alone or with two shRNAs directed against ATR were lysed, and the whole cell extracts were immunoblotted with an antibody against ATR or Ku70 as a loading control (top, left). Vectorinfected cells or cells infected with two ATR shRNAs were mock-treated (-) or treated with UV light (2 J/m2, 1 h after) and lysed. Whole cell extracts were immunoblotted with two phospho-specific antibodies to Chk1 (Chk1-S317P, Chk1-S345P) and Ku70 (top, right). The soluble and the chromatin fractions were isolated from U2OS cells retrovirally infected with vector alone or with two shRNAs directed against ATR after mock treatment (-), treatment with HU (1 mM, 24 h after; bottom left), or exposure to UV light (30 J/m2, 1 h after; bottom right). Fractions were immunoblotted with antibodies to RPA1, RPA2, or with two phospho-specific antibodies recognizing either phosphorylation at serine 33 of RPA2 (RPA2-S33P) or phosphorylation at serines 4/8 of RPA2 (RPA2-S4/8P). An antibody to Ku70 was used as a loading control.

 
To confirm this result, endogenous ATR expression was silenced by expressing two ATR-shRNA sequences from a retroviral vector (39). In the presence of the shRNAs directed against ATR, ATR protein levels were significantly reduced (Fig. 1D, top). In addition, both Chk1 phosphorylation and H2AX phosphorylation following UV light, two well characterized ATR-dependent phosphorylation events, were also reduced when compared with the levels of phosphorylation in the vector-infected cells (Fig. 1D, top and data not shown). To look at RPA2 hyperphosphorylation in these cells, the soluble and the chromatin fractions were isolated after exposure to UV or HU treatment. RPA recruitment to the chromatin was again not affected by the reduction in ATR expression (Fig. 1D, compare the soluble versus the chromatin fractions for RPA1 and RPA2), but RPA2 hyperphosphorylation was significantly reduced when ATR was silenced, and there was an accumulation of the chromatin-bound unphosphorylated form of RPA2 in response to both UV and HU treatment (Fig. 1D).

Among the multiple UV-inducible phosphorylation sites that have been mapped at the amino terminus of RPA2 (29, 48), threonine 21 (TQ) and serine 33 (SQ), but not serines 4 and 8 (non-SQ sites), are ATR consensus sites. Nevertheless, using phospho-specific antibodies to serine 33, or serines 4 and 8, we observed that both UV- and HU-induced phosphorylation at Ser-33, and at the Ser-4/Ser-8 sites, were reduced when ATR activity was inhibited (Fig. 1, C and D, bottom). Taken together, our results suggest that in response to UV light or HU, RPA is recruited to the chromatin in an ATR-independent manner, and RPA2 is then phosphorylated at several sites in its amino terminus in an ATR-dependent manner.

DNA-PK and ATM Do Not Significantly Contribute to UV- or HU-induced RPA2 Phosphorylation on Chromatin—To determine the contribution of the other members of the PI3-like family of kinases to UV- or HU-induced RPA2 phosphorylation on chromatin, we silenced DNA-PK or ATM in U2OS cells by retroviral infection of two shRNAs directed against two different sites in the DNA-PK or in the ATM mRNA. Silencing the expression of DNA-PK or ATM by this method significantly reduced the levels of detectable protein (Fig. 2A). To confirm that ATM kinase activity was compromised, phosphorylation of Chk2, an ATM substrate, was analyzed after mock treatment or treatment with ionizing radiation (IR). Compared with the vector-infected cells, there was a significant reduction in Chk2 phosphorylation at threonine 68 after IR treatment in the cells expressing the ATM-shRNAs (Fig. 2A). To confirm that the DNA-PK shRNAs were effectively inhibiting the kinase activity of DNA-PK, the protein levels of c-Myc were analyzed. It has been demonstrated previously that DNA-PK activity is required for maintaining stable c-Myc (42). Cells expressing the DNA-PK shRNAs had significantly reduced c-Myc protein levels when compared with vector-infected cells (Fig. 2A), suggesting that DNA-PK activity was effectively inhibited by the expression of the shRNAs. Cells expressing the ATM-shRNAs or the DNA-PK-shRNAs were mock-treated, exposed to UV light, or treated with HU alongside cells expressing two shR-NAs directed against ATR. At specific times after treatment, chromatin was isolated from these cells, and the level of RPA2 phosphorylation was compared with cells infected with vector alone. Although silencing ATR had an obvious impact on RPA2 hyperphosphorylation, and a noticeable effect on phosphorylation of both serines 4/8 and serine 33 on chromatin following UV and HU treatment (Fig. 2B), a significant defect in RPA2 phosphorylation on the chromatin was not apparent when either ATM (Fig. 2C) or DNA-PK (Fig. 2E) was silenced, as judged by both RPA2 shift and by using phospho-specific antibodies. Although reduction of ATM protein levels had a small effect on RPA2 phosphorylation, specifically on phosphorylation of serine residue 33 in response to UV and HU treatment, this reduction was much less than when ATR protein levels were reduced.

Chromatin was also isolated from the ATM-deficient fibroblast cell line FT169 and its isogenic ATM-reconstituted derivative cell line YZ5 (49) after UV treatment. The expression of ATM was only detected in the YZ5-reconstituted cell line (Fig. 2D). Similar to the results using the ATM-shRNA-expressing cells, only a minor difference in the UV-induced phosphorylation of chromatin-bound RPA2 was observed in the ATM-deficient cells (FT169), relative to the reconstituted cell line (YZ5; Fig. 2D). From these observations, we conclude that UV- or HU-induced RPA2 phosphorylation on chromatin is primarily dependent on ATR, and DNA-PK and ATM do not significantly contribute to UV- or HU-induced phosphorylation of chromatin-bound RPA2.

UV- or HU-induced Phosphorylation of Ser-4/8 or Ser-33 on RPA2 Does Not Depend on Phosphorylation of the Other Sites—Among the mapped UV-inducible phosphorylation sites, Thr-21 (TQ) and Ser-33 (SQ) are consensus sites for ATR and the other members of the PI3-like kinase family, but Ser-4/8 and Ser-11, Ser-12, and Ser-13 are not (Fig. 3A). To examine the contribution of phosphorylation at these sites to the overall in vivo phosphorylation of RPA2 in response to UV light and HU, several residues in the amino terminus of RPA2 were mutated to alanine either individually or in combination with each other. HA-tagged copies of either wild-type RPA2 or the mutant alleles of RPA2 were retrovirally infected into U2OS cells, and chromatin was isolated from these cells following exposure to UV or HU treatment. Compared with wild-type RPA2, mutation of threonine 21 together with serine 33 reduced the intensity of the phosphorylated forms of RPA2 ~2-fold following UV light or HU (Fig. 3B). Notably, the unphosphorylated form of RPA2 (indicated as HA-RPA2) accumulated in the T21A/S33A mutant, but there was no obvious difference in the overall banding pattern of RPA2. Strikingly, when serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 (non-SQ sites) were mutated to alanine residues, the slower migrating forms of RPA2 were almost completely abolished in response to both UV light and HU (Fig. 3B). When T21A/S33A was combined with S4A/S8A/S11A/S12A/S13A, the appearance of the slower migrating forms was not further reduced (Fig. 3B). These results suggest that the appearance of the phosphorylation-induced banding pattern of RPA2 requires phosphorylation at one or more of the serine 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 sites.

Because mutation of S4A/S8A/S11A/S12A/S13A almost completely abolished the slower migrating phosphorylated forms of RPA2 induced by UV or HU treatment (Fig. 3B), it raised a question as to whether phosphorylation at Thr-21/Ser-33 requires existing phosphorylation of serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13. If this is the case, loss of phosphorylation at Ser-4, Ser-8, Ser-11, Ser-12, and Ser-13 would prevent phosphorylation of Thr-21 or Ser-33 following DNA damage and would therefore almost completely abolish damage-induced RPA2 phosphorylation. To test whether phosphorylation of RPA2 at Ser-4/8 or Ser-33 depends upon phosphorylation of the other site, we mutated RPA2 at one of these sites and used phospho-specific antibodies to determine whether the other site was still phosphorylated after UV- or HU-induced DNA damage. HA-tagged wild-type RPA2 or RPA2 containing serine to alanine substitutions at residues 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13, or at threonine 21 and serine 33, or at all of these sites (S4A/S8A/S11A/S12A/S13A/T21A/S33A), were introduced into U2OS cells by retroviral infection. Endogenous RPA2 was silenced by two rounds of retroviral infection of an shRNA targeting the 3'-UTR of the RPA2 mRNA (40). Chromatin was isolated from these cell lines after cells were mock-treated, exposed to UV light, or treated with HU. Mutation of serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 to alanine residues did not disrupt phosphorylation of RPA2 at serine 33 following UV or HU treatment (Fig. 3C, left). Likewise, substitution of alanine residues for threonine 21 and serine 33 of RPA2 did not disrupt phosphorylation of RPA2 at serines 4/8 in response to UV light or HU (Fig. 3C, right). Mutation of all of these sites (Ser-4, Ser-8, Ser-11, Ser-12, and Ser-13 and Thr-21/Ser-33, marked as 7xA mutant) completely abolished any detectable RPA2 phosphorylation at Ser-4/8 or Ser-33 following UV light and HU (Fig. 3C), confirming that silencing of endogenous RPA2 in these cell lines was efficient. These results suggest that phosphorylation of Ser-4/8 and phosphorylation of Ser-33 occur independently of one another in response to UV light and HU. When serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 are mutated to alanines, loss of the damage-induced slower migrating form of RPA2 is not because of the fact that Ser-33 is not phosphorylated. Therefore, this dramatic change in the migration of RPA2 upon UV or HU treatment is likely because of a conformational change in the protein that is introduced upon phosphorylation of Ser-4, Ser-8, Ser-11, Ser-12, and Ser-13, whereas phosphorylation of Thr-21/Ser-33 has only a minor effect on its migration. This also indicates that the migration of RPA2 may not be proportional to the extent of RPA2 phosphorylation but may be more dependent upon which sites in RPA2 are actually phosphorylated.


Figure 2
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FIGURE 2.
DNA-PK and ATM do not significantly contribute to HU- or UV-induced RPA2 phosphorylation. A, U2OS cells that had been retrovirally infected with vector alone, or with two shRNAs directed against two different target sequences in ATM, were lysed, and the whole cell extracts were immunoblotted as indicated (1st panel). Vector-infected cells, or cells infected with two ATM shRNAs were mock-treated (-) or treated with ionizing radiation (2 Gy, 30 min after), lysed, and immunoblotted with a phospho-specific antibody to Chk2 (Chk2-T68P) or an antibody against total cellular Chk2 (2nd panel). Cells infected with vector alone or with two shRNAs directed against DNA-PK were lysed, and the whole cell extracts were immunoblotted with the indicated antibodies (right two panels). B, chromatin was isolated from U2OS cells retrovirally infected with vector only or with two shRNAs directed against ATR after mock treatment (0), exposure to UV light (30 J/m2, 2, 4, 6, and 8 h after), or treatment with HU (1 mM, 16, 18, and 24 h after). Chromatin was immunoblotted using antibodies to RPA1, RPA2, or two phospho-specific antibodies recognizing either phosphorylation of serine 33 of RPA2 (RPA2-S33P) or phosphorylation of serines 4/8 of RPA2 (RPA2-S4/8P). An antibody to Ku70 was used as a loading control. C, chromatin was isolated from U2OS cells retrovirally infected with vector only or with two shRNAs directed against ATM after mock treatment (0), exposure to UV light (30 J/m2, 2, 4, 6, and 8 h after), or treatment with HU (1 mM, 16, 18, and 24 h after) and immunoblotted as indicated (top). D, chromatin was isolated from ATM-deficient cells (FT169) and cells reconstituted with wild-type ATM (YZ5) after mock treatment (0), or exposure to UV light (30 J/m2, 2, 4, 6, and 8 h after) and immunoblotted with antibodies specific to RPA1, RPA2, phosphorylated RPA2, or Ku70 as a loading control (bottom). E, chromatin was isolated from U2OS cells retrovirally infected with vector only or with two shRNAs directed against DNA-PK after mock treatment (0), exposure to UV light (30 J/m2, 2, 4, 6, and 8 h after), or treatment with HU (1 mM, 16, 18, and 24 h after) and immunoblotted as indicated.

 
ATR Directly Phosphorylates Threonine 21 and Serine 33 of RPA2 in Vitro—To determine which sites in the amino terminus of RPA2 can be phosphorylated directly by ATR in vitro, GST-tagged wild-type RPA2 consisting of amino acids 1-51 or this fragment of RPA2 containing serine to alanine substitutions at serine residues 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13, or at threonine 21 and serine 33 were purified from E. coli and used as substrates for an ATR in vitro kinase assay. Although mutation of serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 had no effect on the in vitro phosphorylation of RPA2 by ATR, mutation of threonine 21 and serine 33 completely abolished phosphorylation by ATR in vitro (Fig. 4A). These experiments demonstrate that ATR can directly phosphorylate threonine 21 and serine 33 but not serines 4, 8, 11, 12, or 13 of RPA2 in vitro.

Downstream of the previously mapped UV-inducible phosphorylation sites in the amino terminus of RPA2, there are three additional SQ sites (Ser-52, Ser-72, and Ser-174). The contribution of these three sites to RPA2 phosphorylation following UV light or HU has not been described previously. To determine whether ATR could phosphorylate RPA2 at serines 52, 72, or 174 in vitro and to substantiate the idea that these SQ sites could contribute to RPA2 phosphorylation in vivo following DNA damage, GST-tagged RPA2 consisting of amino acids 1-188 or mutant forms of this fragment containing serine to alanine substitutions at serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13, threonine 21 and serine 33, or at all of these sites in addition to serines 52, 72, and 174 were purified and used as substrates for an ATR in vitro kinase assay. Using this larger GST-RPA2 protein as a substrate, mutation of threonine 21 and serine 33 again almost completely abolished the in vitro RPA2 phosphorylation by ATR (Fig. 4B), suggesting that Thr-21 and Ser-33 are the major ATR phosphorylation sites in vitro. However, combining mutations at serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13, Thr-21, and Ser-33, along with mutations at Ser-52, Ser-72, and Ser-174, further decreased RPA2 phosphorylation by ATR suggesting that ATR may phosphorylate one or more of these three residues (Ser-52, Ser-72, and Ser-174) in vitro (Fig. 4B). Because mutating these sites had such a minor effect on ATR-dependent phosphorylation of RPA2 in vitro, we did not analyze the contribution of these sites to RPA2 phosphorylation in vivo.

Chk1 Is Not Required for RPA2 Phosphorylation at Serines 4/8 in Vivo or in Vitro—We showed that the Ser-4/8 sites are not direct ATR phosphorylation sites in vitro, but UV- and HU-induced phosphorylation of these sites in vivo does depend on ATR activity. We also showed that phosphorylation of Ser-4/8 is independent of the phosphorylation at Thr-21/Ser-33, suggesting that RPA2 phosphorylation at Ser-4/8 does not require a priming phosphorylation event at Thr-21/Ser-33 that is dependent on ATR. Therefore, it is likely that a kinase downstream of ATR may be involved in phosphorylating serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 following UV and HU treatment. One candidate that might be responsible for this phosphorylation is Chk1, as its activation is dependent upon ATR in response to UV light and HU (50). To examine whether Chk1 may contribute to RPA2 phosphorylation in response to UV light and HU, two shRNAs targeting distinct regions of the Chk1 mRNA were expressed in U2OS cells. Cdc25A was stabilized in the shRNA-Chk1 expressing cells as described (51, 52), suggesting that Chk1 was sufficiently silenced (supplemental Fig. 2A). Phosphorylation at Ser-4/8 and at Ser-33 detected by phospho-specific antibodies and the overall RPA2 phosphorylation as judged by the appearance of the slower migrating forms of RPA2 were not reduced following UV or HU treatment when the expression of Chk1 was suppressed (supplemental Fig. 2B). Interestingly, after HU treatment, RPA2 phosphorylation was significantly increased when Chk1 levels were reduced (supplemental Fig. 2B, bottom right), which is consistent with a recent study reporting that Chk1 inhibition results in an increase in phosphorylation of ATR substrates (53). An in vitro kinase assay also confirmed that wild-type GST-RPA2-(1-51), containing serines 4 and 8, is not a Chk1 substrate (Fig. 4C). These results lead us to conclude that although UV- and HU-induced phosphorylation of RPA2 at Ser-4/8 depends upon ATR, the relevant direct kinase of these sites is not situated in the ATR-Chk1 pathway.

Phosphorylation of RPA2 by ATR Is Required to Inhibit DNA Replication after Exposure to UV Light—It has been demonstrated that ATR is recruited to the chromatin specifically during S-phase (54) and plays important roles to maintain genomic integrity (55). ATR is not only required to maintain fork stability, and/or mediate damage repair during S-phase because chromosomal fragile sites are more unstable when ATR is compromised (41), but it is also involved in monitoring S-phase progression and activating the DNA damage-induced checkpoint when replication forks are arrested (3). In this regard, it has been described that following UV treatment, ATR is required to mediate the slowing down of DNA replication (8), but the mechanisms by which it does so are currently not well understood. We have shown that chromatin-bound RPA is a substrate of ATR when replication forks are stalled. This promoted us to examine whether RPA is an ATR effector protein mediating ATR-dependent damage responses to inhibit replication following UV treatment.


Figure 3
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FIGURE 3.
UV- or HU-induced phosphorylation of Thr-21/Ser-33 and Ser-4, Ser-8, Ser-11, Ser-12, and Ser-13 on RPA2 are two independent events. A, schematic representation of RPA2 depicting the UV-induced RPA2 phosphorylation sites in the amino terminus of the protein that have been described previously (23), and the three additional SQ sites downstream (Ser-52, Ser-72, and Ser-174). The sequence of RPA2 from amino acids 1 to 35 is shown. Damage-inducible RPA2 phosphorylation sites are boxed. Black boxes indicate TQ/SQ sites, and gray boxes indicate non-SQ/TQ sites. B, U2OS cells retrovirally infected with HA-tagged wild-type RPA2 or one of the indicated RPA2 mutant alleles containing alanine mutations at the specified residues were mock-treated (-), exposed to UV light (30 J/m2, 1 h after; left), or treated with HU (1 mM, 24 h after; right). Chromatin was isolated and immunoblotted with an anti-HA antibody for RPA2, with an anti-RPA1 antibody, or with an antibody to Ku70 to serve as a loading control. C, U2OS cells were retrovirally infected with HA-tagged wild-type RPA2, or one of the indicated RPA2 mutant alleles containing alanine mutations at the specified residues in the RPA2 protein. Endogenous RPA2 was silenced in these cell lines by two sequential retroviral infections of RPA2 shRNA directed against a sequence in the 3'-UTR of the RPA2 mRNA followed by selection of G418- or hygromycin-resistant cells. Chromatin was isolated from these cell lines after mock treatment (-), exposure to UV light (30 J/m2, 1 h after), or treatment with HU (1 mM, 24 h after) and immunoblotted as indicated.

 
To test the biological function of ATR-mediated phosphorylation of RPA2, we used the U2OS cell lines expressing wild-type RPA2 or the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant (S4A/S8A/S11A/S12A/S13A/T21A/S33A) where endogenous RPA2 was silenced by shRNAs targeting the 3'-UTR. Following HU treatment, no detectable RPA2 phosphorylation was evident in the cell line expressing the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant when phospho-specific antibodies recognizing Ser-4/8 or Ser-33 were used (Fig. 5A), suggesting that endogenous RPA2 was efficiently inactivated by expression of the shRNAs. The effectiveness of the RPA2 shR-NAs was supported by the fact that their expression caused significant cell death in U2OS cells (Fig. 5C). Like wild-type RPA2, the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant co-immunoprecipitated RPA1, indicating that substitution of the serine residues in the amino terminus of the protein did not affect the interaction of RPA2 with RPA1 (Fig. 5B). Notably, there was no obvious growth defect in this cell line (data not shown), and the lethality caused by the expression of the RPA2-shRNA was suppressed by both retrovirally expressing either wild-type RPA2 or the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant (Fig. 5C). Furthermore, the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant cell line (with endogenous RPA2 silenced) resumed replication with a rate similar to the cell line expressing wild-type RPA2 after release from HU arrest (Fig. 5D), and immunostaining analysis demonstrated that the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant, like wild-type RPA2, co-localized with proliferating cell nuclear antigen in S-phase foci indicating that the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant did not have a defect in migrating to replication centers in S-phase (data not shown). The percentage of S-phase cells judged by proliferating cell nuclear antigen staining in the cell line expressing the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant was similar to that of the cell line expressing wild-type RPA2 (data not shown). Taken together, these results suggest that disruption of the DNA damage-responsive sites in the amino terminus of RPA2 does not affect the normal S-phase functions of RPA2 or cell growth


Figure 4
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FIGURE 4.
ATR directly phosphorylates threonine 21 and serine 33 of RPA2. A, FLAG-tagged ATR transiently transfected into 293T cells was immunoprecipitated and incubated in the presence of [{gamma}-32P]ATP with glutathione-eluted GST-RPA2 (amino acids 1-51) wild type, one of the indicated RPA2 mutant proteins (amino acids 1-51), containing alanine mutations at the specified residues, or as a positive control, glutathione-eluted GST-Chk2 (amino acids 1-92) all of which had been purified from E. coli on glutathione-Sepharose (top, right). The Coomassie-stained gel shows the relative amount of protein added to the in vitro kinase reactions (bottom right). The Western blot shows the whole cell extract (WCE) and immunoprecipitate (IP) from cells transfected with FLAG-tagged ATR (top, left). B, FLAG-tagged ATR transiently transfected into 293T cells was immunoprecipitated and incubated in the presence of [{gamma}-32P]ATP with glutathione-eluted GST-RPA2 (amino acids 1-188) wild type, one of the indicated RPA2 mutant proteins (amino acids 1-188), containing alanine mutations at the specified residues, or as a positive control glutathione-eluted GST-Chk2 (amino acids 1-92), all of which had been purified from E. coli on glutathione-Sepharose (left). The Coomassie-stained gel shows the relative amount of protein added to the in vitro kinase reactions (right). C, HA-tagged Chk1 transiently transfected into 293T cells was immunoprecipitated and then incubated in the presence of [{gamma}-32P]ATP with glutathione-eluted GST-Cdc25C (amino acids 200-256), GST-RPA2 (amino acids 1-51), or GST alone (top, right). The Coomassiestained gel shows the relative amount of protein added to the in vitro kinase reactions (bottom right). The Western blot shows the whole cell extract (WCE) and immunoprecipitate (IP) from cells transfected with HA-Chk1 (top left).

 
RPA2 forms damage foci after UV and HU treatment (40, 56). Similar to wild-type RPA2, the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant also migrated to damage-induced foci following UV- or HU-induced DNA damage (supplemental Fig. 3). Therefore, lack of RPA2 phosphorylation by ATR had no effect on damage-induced RPA2 foci formation. This is consistent with our previous observation that the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant, like wild-type RPA2, is recruited to the chromatin following UV and HU treatment (40). Hence, the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant that we generated retains not only the ability to carry out RPA2 function in DNA replication during the normal cell cycle, but it also retains the ability to sense DNA damage and migrate to damage-induced foci.

To determine whether RPA2 phosphorylation by ATR is required for mediating the replication check-point in response to UV-induced DNA damage, we examined the rate of DNA synthesis in U2OS cells expressing wild-type RPA2 or the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant (with endogenous RPA2 silenced) following exposure to UV radiation. Although the rate of DNA synthesis was down-regulated following UV light in cells infected with vector only (endogenous RPA2 was not silenced) or with wild-type RPA2 (with endogenous RPA2 silenced), cells expressing the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant (with endogenous RPA2 silenced) inhibited DNA synthesis to a significantly lesser extent (p < 0.01; Fig. 6A). Likewise, inactivation of ATR, but not DNA-PK, compromised the down-regulation of DNA synthesis after UV light (p < 0.005 for ATR shRNA; Fig. 6B). Notably, although the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant shows a clear defect in the inhibition of DNA replication after UV treatment, the effect is less prominent than the effect observed in the cell line expressing the ATR shRNAs. This suggests that other pathway(s), parallel to the RPA pathway, exist downstream of ATR and are also required to mediate the S-phase checkpoint. In this regard, it has also been demonstrated that MCM proteins are directly phosphorylated by ATM/ATR (58) and may also be involved in mediating the ATR-dependent S-phase checkpoint following UV light. Although multiple pathways may be involved, our studies demonstrate that RPA is a critical target of ATR in the UV-induced S-phase checkpoint response.


Figure 5
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FIGURE 5.
ATR-dependent RPA2 phosphorylation is not important for either cell survival or recovery following HU arrest. A, U2OS cells were retrovirally infected with HA-tagged wild-type RPA2 or a mutant allele of RPA2 containing alanine mutations at serines 4, 8, 11, 12, 13, and 33, and threonine 21 (HA-RPA2-(7xA)-mutant). Endogenous RPA2 was silenced in these cell lines by two sequential retroviral infections of RPA2 shRNA directed against a sequence in the 3'-UTR of the RPA2 mRNA followed by selection of G418- or hygromycin-resistant cells. Chromatin was isolated from these cell lines after mock treatment (-) or treatment with HU (1 mM, 24 h after) and then immunoblotted using the indicated antibodies. HA-RPA2 was detected with an anti-RPA2 antibody or with two phospho-specific antibodies recognizing Ser(P)-33 (S33P) or Ser(P)-4/8 (S4/8-P). B, HA-tagged RPA2, or the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant was immunoprecipitated from U2OS cells with an anti-HA antibody. Immunoprecipitates were immunoblotted with an anti-RPA1 antibody and an anti-HA antibody to ensure an equal amount of the RPA2 wild-type, and 7xA-mutant proteins were immunoprecipitated (IP). C, uninfected U2OS cells or those that were retrovirally infected with one or two shRNAs directed against the 3'-UTR of the RPA2 mRNA, or those that were infected first with either HA-tagged RPA2 or the HA-tagged RPA2-(7xA)-mutant and then infected with two shRNAs directed against endogenous RPA2 were lysed, and the whole cell extracts were immunoblotted with antibodies against RPA1, RPA2, or Ku70 (left). Forty eight hours after the final infection, cells from these five cell lines were counted and plated in triplicate at 1 x 104 cells per plate. Surviving cells were counted 3 days later following trypan blue staining. The average number of viable cells from each cell line was normalized to the average number of viable cells obtained from the uninfected control cell line and graphed (right). Error bars represent the standard deviation from the average of three independent experiments. D, U2OS cells retrovirally infected with HA-tagged RPA2 or the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant, where endogenous RPA2 was silenced, were arrested by HU treatment (1 mM, 24 h). After 24 h, cells were washed and released into the cell cycle. At the indicated times following release, cells were fixed and analyzed by flow cytometry.

 
We showed that phosphorylation of multiple sites in the amino terminus of RPA2 is ATR-dependent. Although Thr-21 and Ser-33 were directly phosphorylated by ATR, serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 were not direct ATR substrates. We determined whether the two groups of phosphorylation sites, either direct or indirect substrates of ATR, were required for ATR-mediated down-regulation of DNA replication following UV light. To do this, the rate of DNA synthesis was determined in U2OS cells expressing RPA2 containing serine to alanine mutations at residues 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13, and in cells expressing RPA2 with threonine 21 and serine 33 mutated to alanine, when endogenous RPA2 was silenced (Fig. 6C). Mutation of threonine 21 and serine 33 resulted in significant UV-resistant DNA synthesis (p < 0.005; Fig. 6C, left), although slightly less than the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant (S4A/S8A/S11A/S12A/S13A/T21A/S33A), but mutation of serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 alone did not affect the down-regulation of DNA synthesis following UV light (Fig. 6C, right). Therefore, phosphorylation of threonine 21 and/or serine 33 of RPA2 is more critical than phosphorylation of serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 for the inhibition of DNA replication following UV light.


Figure 6
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FIGURE 6.
ATR-dependent phosphorylation of RPA2 is required to inhibit DNA replication after exposure to UV light, without affecting checkpoint activation. A, the rate of DNA synthesis following exposure to UV light (10 J/m2) was determined in U2OS cells retrovirally infected with vector alone when endogenous RPA2 was not silenced, with HA-tagged RPA2 when endogenous RPA2 was silenced, or with the HA-tagged RPA2-(7xA)-mutant when endogenous RPA2 was silenced. These rates were expressed as percentages by normalizing to the appropriate mock-treated controls. The average of three independent experiments is shown in the graph with error bars indicating the standard deviation from the average. The difference between the rates of DNA synthesis after UV light in the cells expressing the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant protein compared with cells expressing the wild-type RPA2 protein is statistically significant (p < 0.01). B, rate of DNA synthesis following exposure to UV light (10 J/m2) was determined in U2OS cells retrovirally infected twice with vector alone, with two shRNAs directed against ATR, or with two shRNAs directed against DNA-PK. These rates were expressed as percentages by normalizing to the appropriate mock-treated controls. The average of three independent experiments is shown in the graph with error bars indicating the standard deviation from the average. The difference between the rates of DNA synthesis after UV light in the cells expressing the ATR shRNAs compared with cells expressing vector alone is statistically significant (p < 0.005). C, the rate of DNA synthesis following exposure to UV light (10 J/m2) was determined in U2OS cells retrovirally infected with HA-tagged RPA2, with the RPA2-T21/S33A mutant allele, or with the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant, when endogenous RPA2 was silenced in each of these cell lines (left), or in U2OS cells retrovirally infected with vector alone when endogenous RPA2 was expressed at normal cellular levels, with HA-tagged RPA2 when endogenous RPA2 was silenced, or with the RPA2-S4A/S8A/S11A/S12A/S13A mutant allele when endogenous RPA2 was silenced (right). These rates were expressed as percentages by normalizing to the appropriate mock-treated controls. The averages from three independent experiments for each cell line are showninthe graphs with error bars indicating the standard deviation from the average. The reduction of DNA synthesis after UV light in the RPA2-S4A/S8A/S11A/S12A/S13A cells is not significantly different from the wild-type RPA2 cells (p > 0.1), whereas the reduction of DNA synthesis after UV light in the RPA2-T21A/S33A cells is significantly less than in the wild-type RPA2 cells (p < 0.005). D, U2OS cells retrovirally expressing HA-tagged RPA2 or RPA2-(7xA)-mutant, where endogenous RPA2 was silenced, were mock-treated (-), exposed to UV light (2 J/m2, 1 h after), IR (2 Gy, 1 h after), or treated with HU (0.1 mM, 2 h after) and then lysed and immunoblotted with the indicated antibodies.

 
It has been described that after RPA2 is phosphorylated, the interaction of RPA with Rad9/Rad1/Hus1 is increased (56). This suggests that the initial phosphorylation of RPA2 may be involved in amplifying checkpoint signals by regulating the Rad9/Rad1/Hus1 pathway. Therefore, the requirement of ATR-mediated RPA2 phosphorylation in the inhibition of replication could be due to loss of checkpoint activation when ATR-mediated RPA2 phosphorylation is impaired. To determine whether phosphorylation of RPA2 by ATR plays any role in checkpoint activation following RPA recruitment to the chromatin, cell lines expressing wild-type RPA2 or the RPA2-(7xA)-mutant where endogenous RPA2 was silenced were treated with a low concentration of HU or exposed to low doses of UV light or IR. Checkpoint activation was determined by using phospho-specific antibodies to Chk1 and Chk2, two kinases downstream of ATR and ATM, respectively. Disruption of RPA2 phosphorylation had no significant effect on either Chk1 phosphorylation following UV light or HU or Chk2 phosphorylation following IR (Fig. 6D). These data suggest that RPA2 phosphorylation does not affect ATR-mediated activation of the checkpoint response following UV or HU treatment. Thus, the loss of UV-induced replication inhibition in the presence of the RPA2 phospho-mutants is likely because of a defect in inhibiting DNA replication directly. Taken together, our studies suggest that ATR-mediated phosphorylation at the amino terminus of RPA2 is required to prevent DNA replication after UV-induced S-phase checkpoint activation in mammalian cells.

Phosphorylation of RPA2 by ATR May Prevent RPA Localization to Replication Centers—To explore the possible mechanism by which ATR-mediated RPA2 phosphorylation inhibits DNA replication, we generated phospho-mimetic mutants of RPA2 by replacing serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13, threonine 21, and serine 33, or all of these residues with aspartate residues. Although an aspartate residue is not the same as a phosphorylated serine or threonine, it has been shown in many cases that the replacement of serine/threonine with aspartate can functionally substitute for phosphorylation events (60-63). It has been described that RPA2 phospho-mimetic mutants with aspartate substitutions at both the cyclin-Cdk2 phosphorylation sites and at the damage-inducible phosphorylation sites fail to localize to DNA replication centers (40), suggesting that phosphorylation of RPA2 may play an important role in regulating DNA replication. In this study, we specifically examined RPA2 mutants containing serine or threonine to aspartate substitutions at the ATR direct or indirect phosphorylation sites for their ability to localize to replication centers.

HA-tagged wild-type RPA2 or RPA2 phospho-mimetic mutants, including S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D, T21D/S33D, or S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D/T21D/S33D, were retrovirally expressed in U2OS cells at similar levels (Fig. 7B). Because RPA forms S-phase-specific foci at replication centers that can be visualized after nonionic detergent extraction prior to fixation (64), we examined the localization of HA-tagged wild-type RPA2 and the phospho-mimetic RPA2 mutants to replication centers that were marked by endogenous RPA1 foci. Endogenous RPA1 immunostaining after extraction was used to indicate S-phase cells and S-phase-specific RPA foci (Fig. 7A). Immunostaining of nonextracted cells showed that HA-tagged wild-type RPA2 and all of the phospho-mimetic RPA2 mutants were expressed in the nucleus in every cell following retroviral infection and selection (Fig. 7A and data not shown).

After extraction, cells retrovirally expressing wild-type HA-RPA2 formed RPA2 S-phase foci (detected by an anti-HA antibody) that were visually similar to endogenous RPA1 (Fig. 7A), whereas the HA-tagged RPA2 phospho-mutants exhibited significant defects when different sites were mutated. The RPA2 mutant containing aspartate residues at all of the ATR-dependent phosphorylation sites (S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D/T21D/S33D) did not form any S-phase foci indicating a complete inability of the protein to migrate into replication centers that were marked by RPA1 immunostaining. The T21D/S33D and the S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D mutants formed foci only in a fraction of cells containing RPA1 foci, with a more dramatic decrease in the T21D/S33D mutant (Fig. 7C, left). Moreover, among the cells containing foci in T21D/S33D and S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D mutant cell lines, a substantial number of cells had faint foci (Fig. 7A, white arrows), whereas all of the cells containing wild-type HA-RPA2 had bright foci. There was a significant difference in the percentage of S-phase cells containing normal, bright HA-RPA2 foci relative to the overall number of S-phase cells containing foci in the T21D/S33D and S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D mutant cell lines (Fig. 7C, right). Although a large percentage of the cells expressing the S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D mutant had foci that looked similar to the wild-type HA-RPA2 foci and were bright staining, only a small fraction of the cells in the T21D/S33D mutant had foci that were bright.

These results suggest that the RPA2 phospho-mimetic mutations at ATR-dependent phosphorylation sites prevent RPA2 from localizing to replication centers. Phosphorylation at the ATR-direct sites, Thr-21 and Ser-33, may more strongly inhibit RPA2 S-phase foci formation than phosphorylation at the ATR-indirect sites Ser-4, Ser-8, Ser-11, Ser-12, and Ser-13. The effect of phosphorylation at serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 is also significant, however, because these phospho-mimetic mutations do have a notable defect in foci formation and also further enhance the phenotype of the T21D/S33D mutant as demonstrated in the S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D/T21D/S33D mutant. Collectively, these studies suggest that the inhibition of DNA replication by ATR-dependent phosphorylation of RPA2 is likely a result of the prevention of RPA association with replication centers. The relative minor effect of phosphorylation at serines 4, 8, 11, 12, and 13 on replication may be masked by the phosphorylation at Thr-21/Ser-33, and by other ATR downstream pathway(s), and thus the UVDS phenotype is not observed in the S4A/S8A/S11A/S12A/S13A mutant cell line.


Figure 7
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FIGURE 7.
Phospho-mimetic mutations at threonine 21 and serine 33 of RPA2 result in a significant decrease in the formation of S-phase-specific foci. A, U2OS cells retrovirally expressing HA-tagged RPA2 (top left), HA-RPA2-S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D (top right), HA-RPA2-T21D/S33D (bottom left), or HA-RPA2-S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D/T21D/S33D (bottom right) were fixed directly with 4% formaldehyde in PBS (nonextracted) or extracted with 0.5% Triton X-100 first and then fixed to visualize S-phase specific foci (extracted). Cells were immunostained with an anti-RPA1 antibody, an anti-HA antibody to specifically recognize endogenous RPA1 or HA-tagged wild-type RPA2 or mutant forms of RPA2. B, U2OS cells retrovirally expressing HA-tagged RPA2 or one of the indicated HA-tagged RPA2 phospho-mimetic mutant alleles were lysed. The whole cell extracts were immunoblotted with an anti-HA antibody, an anti-RPA1 antibody, and an anti-Ku70 antibody. C, the frequency of chromatin-bound HA-RPA2 after extraction (showing S-phase-specific foci) was determined by counting the number of RPA1-positive staining cells with HA-RPA2 foci (left panel). Six hundred cells were counted for each cell line in three independent experiments. The average percentage of cells with HA-RPA2 foci is shown in the graph with error bars indicating the standard deviation from the average. The difference in the number of S-phase cells (cells with RPA1 foci) containing HA-RPA2 foci in the cell line expressing the HA-RPA2-S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D mutant compared with cells expressing the HA-RPA2-T21D/S33D mutant is statistically significant (p < 0.01; left graph). From these experiments, there was a noticeable difference in the number of cells containing bright staining HA-RPA2 foci, compared with cells containing faint staining HA-RPA2 foci among the different RPA2 phospho-mimetic cell lines. The percentage of cells containing normal bright HA-RPA2 S-phase foci among all of the HA-RPA2-positive staining cells (both bright and faint) was determined in U2OS cells expressing HA-tagged wild-type RPA2 or phospho-mimetic RPA2 mutants (S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D, T21D/S33D, and all D) and was graphed in C (right panel). One hundred cells were counted for each cell line in three independent experiments, and the average percentage of cells with bright HA-RPA2 foci was graphed. Error bars indicate the standard deviation from the average. Examples of cells with faint staining chromatin-bound HA-RPA2 foci, as compared with bright staining HA-RPA2 foci, are indicated with arrows in the pictures at the top.

 
Inhibition of RPA localization to replication centers by phospho-mimetic events suggests that damage-induced RPA2 phosphorylation by ATR may prevent RPA association with the rest of the cellular replication machinery. It has been described that RPA associates with DNA polymerase {alpha}/primase, and RPA phosphorylation in mitosis disrupts this binding (65, 66). We examined whether mimicking phosphorylation of RPA2 at ATR-dependent sites would also alter the binding of RPA with DNA polymerase {alpha}/primase. DNA polymerase {alpha}/primase is composed of four polypeptides, p180 and p68 form the catalytic polymerase subunit and p58 and p48 constitute the primase subunit (67). We expressed each of the primase subunits, p48, p58, p68, and p180, individually in insect cells and used an in vitro pulldown assay with bacterially expressed His-RPA (the RPA1-RPA2-RPA3 complex) that was purified on Ni-NTA resin. By this analysis, we found that RPA bound specifically to p48, but not to p68 or p180 (Fig. 8A). These data are consistent with a previous report concluding that RPA specifically binds to the primase subunit of DNA polymerase {alpha}/primase (65). Because of the relatively low solubility of p58 when it was expressed alone, and the nonspecific bands that appeared around p58 after the RPA-bound Ni-NTA pulldown, we could not resolve whether RPA directly bound to p58. Because RPA directly interacts with p48 or with p48/p58 (65), we examined whether mimicking phosphorylation of RPA2 at the ATR-dependent phosphorylation sites would alter the binding of RPA with the primase subunit. We replaced serine or threonine residues at Ser-4, Ser-8, Ser-11, Ser-12, and Ser-13 at Thr-21/Ser-33, or at all of these sites of RPA2 with aspartate residues in the His-RPA plasmid that co-expressed all three subunits of RPA.


Figure 8
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FIGURE 8.
Phospho-mimetic mutations in RPA2 at the ATR-dependent phosphorylation sites do not affect the in vitro interaction between RPA and the DNA primase subunits p48/p58. A, His-RPA (co-expressing RPA1/RPA2/RPA3) was expressed in E. coli and purified on Ni-NTA resin. Equal amounts of His-RPA-bound nickel beads or empty beads were incubated with lysates from insect cells expressing p48, p68, or p180 individually. After extensive washing, proteins retained on the beads were analyzed by Western blot analysis using antibodies to the p48, p68, and p180 subunits. Input, 1/25 of the total input for the binding assays. B, Ni-NTA resin bound with His-RPA containing either wild-type RPA2 or phospho-mimetic mutants of RPA2 (S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D, T21D/S33D, or S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D/T21D/S33D) or empty beads were incubated with lysates from insect cells expressing p48 alone or co-expressing p48 and p58. Proteins retained on the beads were analyzed by Western blot analysis using antibodies specifically recognizing p48. Input, 1/25 of the total input for the binding assays.

 
His-RPA wild-type and the phospho-mimetic mutants (S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D, T21D/S33D, or all Asp) were expressed and purified from E. coli. The interaction of His-RPA, or the His-RPA-phospho-mimetic mutants with primase p48/p58, was analyzed in vitro. As shown in Fig. 8B, similar amounts of p48 or p48/p58 interacted with His-RPA-wild type, and with each of the RPA2 phospho-mimetic mutants, including S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D, T21D/S33D, and S4D/S8D/S11D/S12D/S13D/T21D/S33D. These data suggest that at least in vitro, phospho-mimetic mutations in RPA2 at the ATR-dependent phosphorylation sites do not alter RPA association with primase. The failure of the phospho-mimetic mutants in forming S-phase specific foci is therefore likely not caused by their impaired interaction with polymerase {alpha}/primase.


    DISCUSSION
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 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Upon DNA damage, the S-phase checkpoint is activated to suppress DNA replication. Although the mechanism of ATM-mediated inhibition of replication following IR has been studied intensely, the downstream effectors of ATR in the S-phase checkpoint remains elusive. Our studies demonstrate that when replication forks encounter DNA damage, RPA is loaded onto chromatin, and RPA2 is then phosphorylated by ATR. Mutating ATR-dependent phosphorylation sites on RPA2 prevents the inhibition of DNA synthesis following UV-induced DNA damage, suggesting that ATR-mediated RPA2 phosphorylation is essential for the suppression of DNA replication following UV light.

RPA2 Phosphorylation on Chromatin Is Mediated Predominantly by ATR after UV or HU Treatment—RPA2 phosphorylation can be triggered by many different kinds of DNA damageinducing agents. However, significant RPA2 phosphorylation seems associated specifically