Cloning, expression and purification of recombinant proteins
Human wild-type DNA2, helicase-dead DNA2 K654R and nuclease-dead DNA2 D277A were expressed in Sf9 insect cells and purified by affinity chromatography taking advantage of the N-terminal 6ÃHis tag and the C-terminal FLAG tag35. Yeast nuclease-dead Dna2 E675A was expressed in S. cerevisiae and purified using the N-terminal FLAG tag and the C-terminal 6ÃHis tag51. Full-length wild-type WRN, helicase-dead WRN K577M, exonuclease-dead WRN E84A, WRN fragments, BLM, as well as wild-type CtIP and its variants were purified exploiting the MBP tag at the N terminus and 10ÃHis tag at the C terminus23,28,35,38,52,53. The MBP tag was removed during purification by cleavage with PreScission protease. For the expression of phosphorylated wild-type CtIP (pCtIP) and its variants, Sf9 cells were treated with 50ânM Okadaic acid (APExBIO) 3 h before collection to preserve the phosphorylated state of the proteins, and 1âµM camptothecin (Sigma) 1 h before collection to increase the activation of the protein phosphorylation cascade. For the expression of dephosphorylated WRN (λWRN) and CtIP (λCtIP), proteins were incubated with λ phosphatase at room temperature for 30âmin during purification. The MRN and MRE11âRAD50 complexes were obtained using the 6ÃHis tag and 3ÃFLAG tag at the C termini of MRE11 and RAD50, respectively23. Human wild-type EXO1, as well as nuclease-dead EXO1 D173A, were purified using M2 anti-FLAG affinity resin (Sigma) and HiTrap SP HP cation exchange chromatography column (Cytiva)26,54. EXO1Î1 (Î353â846) fragment, along with a matched wild-type control, were purified omitting the HiTrap SP HP cation exchange chromatography step. E. coli ExoIII, ScaI and SspI were purchased from New England Biolabs. Wild-type human RAD51, as well as the indicated human RAD51 variants and yeast Rad51, were expressed in BL21 (DE3)pLysS E. coli cells and purified using amylose affinity chromatography followed by HiTrap Q chromatography (Cytiva)48.
The BRCA1 sequence was codon optimized for the expression in Sf9 cells (Biomatik) with flanked NheI and XmaI restriction sites. The full-length sequence is listed in Supplementary Table 1 provided in the Supplementary Information. The BRCA1 gene was then cloned into pFB-2ÃMBP-CtIP-10ÃHis55 to generate pFB-2ÃMBP-BRCA1co-10ÃHis. The cloning created a fusion construct with the 2ÃMBP tag at the N terminus and the 10ÃHis tag at the C terminus. All BRCA1 variants were cloned from pFB-2ÃMBP-BRCA1co-10ÃHis using the primers listed in Supplementary Table 3 provided in the Supplementary Information. Similarly, the BARD1 sequence was codon optimized for the expression in Sf9 cells (Supplementary Table 2 provided in the Supplementary Information, Biomatik) with BamHI and XmaI restriction sites. The BARD1 gene was then cloned into pFB-RAD50co-FLAG23 to generate pFB-BARD1co-FLAG (BARD1 with C-terminal FLAG tag). All BARD1 variants were cloned from pFB-BARD1co-FLAG using the primers listed in Supplementary Table 3 provided in the Supplementary Information. The BRCA1âBARD1 complex, BRCA1 on its own and all variants were expressed in Sf9 cells using the SFX Insect serum-free medium (Hyclone) and the Bac-to-Bac expression system (Invitrogen), according to the manufacturerâs recommendations. Frozen Sf9 pellets from 1âl of culture were resuspended in lysis buffer (50âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 1âmM ethylenediaminetetraacetic (EDTA), 1:400 protease inhibitor cocktail (Sigma, P8340), 30âµgâmlâ1 leupeptin (Merck Millipore), 1âmM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), 1âmM dithiothreitol (DTT), 0.5% NP40) and incubated at 4â°C for 20âmin. Glycerol was added to a final concentration of 25%, NaCl was added to a final concentration of 325âmM and the cell suspension was incubated at 4â°C for 20âmin. The cell suspension was centrifuged at 55,000g at 4â°C for 30âmin. The soluble extract was incubated with amylose resin (New England Biolabs) at 4â°C for 1âh. The resin was washed with amylose wash buffer (50âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 2âmM β-mercaptoethanol, 300âmM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 1âmM PMSF). Proteins were eluted using amylose elution buffer (50âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 2âmM β-mercaptoethanol, 300âmM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 1âmM PMSF, 10âmM maltose (Sigma), 20âmM imidazole (Sigma)). The solution was immediately loaded onto pre-equilibrated Ni-NTA agarose resin (Qiagen) at 4â°C, in flow. The resin was washed with Ni-NTA buffer 1 (50âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 2âmM β-mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol, 1âmM PMSF, 20âmM imidazole and 1âM NaCl for BRCA1 or 0.3âM NaCl for BRCA1âBARD1), and subsequently with Ni-NTA buffer 2 (50âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 2âmM β-mercaptoethanol, 150âmM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 1âmM PMSF, 20âmM imidazole). Proteins were eluted with Ni-NTA elution buffer (50âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 2âmM β-mercaptoethanol, 150âmM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 1âmM PMSF, 200âmM imidazole). Fractions containing high protein concentration as estimated by the Bradford assay were pooled, aliquoted, snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at â80â°C. The BRCA1âBARD1 mutants were purified in the same way. We note that attempts to cleave the MBP tag before Ni-NTA purification resulted in protein precipitation. We could obtain up to roughly 0.6âmg of BRCA1âBARD1 from 1âl of media (approximate stock concentration, 800ânM). For the expression of dephosphorylated BRCA1âBARD1 (λBRCA1âBARD1), the complex was incubated with λ phosphatase at room temperature for 30âmin during purification, along with a matched control that was similarly incubated but without λ phosphatase.
Human RPA sequence was cloned from p11dâtRPA construct56 using the primers listed in Supplementary Table 3 provided in the Supplementary Information. Whereas both RPA1 and RPA2 were flanked by the BamHI and NheI restriction sites, RPA3 was flanked by SalI and XbaI. These restriction enzymes were used to generate pFB-RPA1, pFB-RPA2 and pFB-6ÃHis-RPA3 insect expression vectors used for the protein purification. RPA was expressed in Sf9 cells in SFX Insect serum-free medium (Hyclone) using the Bac-to-Bac expression system (Invitrogen), according to the manufacturerâs recommendations. A frozen Sf9 pellet from 2âl of culture was resuspended in lysis buffer (50âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 2âmM β-mercaptoethanol, 1:200 protease inhibitor cocktail, 60âµgâmlâ1 leupeptin, 1âmM PMSF, 20âmM imidazole, 0.1% NP40) and incubated at 4â°C for 20âmin. Glycerol was added to a final concentration of 25%, KCl was added to a final concentration of 325âmM and the cell suspension was incubated at 4â°C for 30âmin. The cell suspension was centrifuged at 55,000g at 4â°C for 30âmin. The soluble extract was incubated with Ni-NTA affinity resin at 4â°C for 1âh. Ni-NTA resin was washed with wash buffer (50âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 2âmM β-mercaptoethanol, 1âmM PMSF, 10% glycerol, 500âmM KCl, 20âmM imidazole, 0.1% NP40). Protein was eluted using wash buffer containing 300âmM imidazole. The eluate was diluted by adding 2âvolumes of buffer A (30âmM HEPES pHâ7.5, 1âmM DTT, 1âmM PMSF, 10% glycerol, 500âmM KCl, 0.25âmM EDTA, 0.01% NP40). The diluted fractions were purified on a HiTrap Blue HP column (Cytiva) followed by HiTrap desalting column (Cytiva) as described57. Peak desalted fractions were pooled, diluted with 1âvolume of buffer B (30âmM HEPES pHâ7.5, 1âmM DTT, 1âmM PMSF, 10% glycerol, 0.25âmM EDTA) and loaded onto two 5âml HiTrap Heparin columns (Cytiva) connected in tandem. Proteins were eluted using a 30âml gradient of 50âmM to 1âM KCl in 1âml fractions. Peak fractions were pooled and diluted to a final concentration of roughly 100âmM KCl with buffer B. The diluted eluate was loaded and further purified on a HiTrap Q column (Cytiva) as previously described57. We could obtain roughly 45âmg of human RPA from 2âl insect cells. The sequences of all primers used for cloning in this study are listed in Supplementary Table 3 provided in the Supplementary Information. Purified recombinant proteins were analysed by using SDSâPAGE denaturing electrophoresis and stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue (VWR). The final images were acquired with a photo scanner operated with Epson Scan v.3.9.4.0 US software and CanoScan 9000F Mark II scanner operated with ImageCapture v.6.6(525) software.
The sgCtIP (CTCCCGGATCTATACTCCAC) used for depletion of endogenous CtIP in RPE1 EXO1+/+ and RPE1 EXO1â/â cells was cloned into pLentiCRISPR-v2 using BsmBI. The PAM-sequence of this guide RNA (gRNA) was mutated in the full-length pcDNA3.1 CtIP overexpressing constructs (pcDNA3.1_CtIP-WT-2ÃFLAG and pcDNA3.1_CtIP-S327A-2ÃFLAG) using site-directed mutagenesis to render the exogenous CtIP expression insensitive to CRISPR-mediated depletion. Subsequently, the coding sequence was cloned into the Gateway entry vector pENTR_1A using KpnI and NotI before transferring it to the destination vector pCW57.1-Zeo using a Gateway LR reaction.
Sequence analysis of BRCA1 and BARD1 proteins
Alignment of the BRCA1 region 931â1171 and of the BARD1 region 123â261 were generated using the MAFFT method58 and represented using Jalview59.
Preparation of DNA substrates
The sequences of all oligonucleotides used for DNA substrate preparation are listed in Supplementary Table 4 provided in the Supplementary Information. The oligonucleotide-based Y-structured DNA substrate was prepared with the oligonucleotides X12-3HJ3 and X12-3TOPLbis35. The oligonucleotide-based 70âbp-long dsDNA substrate was prepared with the oligonucleotides PC210 and PC211. X12-3HJ3 and PC210 oligonucleotides were 32P-labelled at the 3â² terminus with (α-32P)dCTP (Hartmann Analytic) and terminal transferase (New England Biolabs) according to the manufacturerâs instructions. The oligonucleotide-based 70âbp-long dsDNA biotinylated at the 5â² terminus was prepared using the oligonucleotides PC206 and PC217. PC206 oligonucleotide was 32P-labelled at the 5â² terminus with (γ-32P)ATP (Hartmann Analytic) and T4 PNK (New England Biolabs) according to the manufacturerâs instructions. The randomly labelled 2.2âkbp-long substrate was prepared by amplifying the human NBS1 gene by PCR reaction containing 66ânM (α-32P)dCTP (Hartmann Analytic) with the standard dNTPs concentration (200âµM each)27. When randomly labelled ssDNA was required, the 2.2âkbp-long substrate was heated at 95â°C for 5âmin before the experiments. The HindIII digest of λ DNA (New England Biolabs) was labelled by fill-in at the 3â² end with (α-32P)dCTP (Hartmann Analytic), dGTP, dATP (0.25âmM each) and 5âU of the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I exo- (lacking the 3â²â5â² and 5â²â3â² exonuclease activities of DNA polymerase I) (New England Biolabs). Unincorporated nucleotides were removed with Micro Bio-Spin P-30 Tris chromatography columns (BioRad). When the heat-denatured substrate was needed, the substrate was incubated at 95â°C for 5âmin to obtain ssDNA27. pUC19-based dsDNA substrate was prepared by digesting the pUC19 plasmid with HindIII-HF restriction enzyme (New England Biolabs) according to the manufacturerâs instructions, and purified by phenol-chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation. The resulting linear dsDNA was labelled by fill-in at the 3â² end with 0.25âmM of (α-32P)dCTP (Hartmann Analytic), dGTP, dATP and 5âU of the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I exo- (New England Biolabs). Unincorporated nucleotides were removed using Micro Bio-Spin P-30 Tris chromatography columns (BioRad). For the ATPase assay with wild-type DNA2 and helicase-dead DNA2 D277A, the 10.3âkbp-long pFB-MBP-hMLH3 plasmid60 was linearized with NheI (New England Biolabs) and purified with QIAquick PCR purification kit (Qiagen). The substrate was denatured at 95â°C for 5âmin to obtain ssDNA. The overhanging substrate used for single-molecule magnetic tweezer experiments was prepared as previously described61,62. Briefly, the main 6.6âkbp-long fragment was prepared from pNLRep plasmid63 using the restriction enzymes BamHI and BsrGI (New England Biolabs). Furthermore, a 63ânt-long ssDNA gap was introduced using the nicking enzyme Nt.BbvCI (New England Biolabs). The gap was then filled by hybridizing a 25ânt-long DNA oligomer carrying an extra 40ânt-long polythimidine tail at the 5â² end (overhang), followed by 3â² end ligation inside the gap. Subsequently, 600âbp-long DNA handles carrying either several digoxigenin or biotin modifications were attached at either end. The handles were produced by PCR using as a template the plasmids pBlueScript II SK+â(digoxigenin, Dig handle Forward and Dig handle Reverse primers) or pNLRep (biotin, Bio handle Forward and Bio handle Reverse primers), respectively, in the presence of digoxigenin and biotin-modified nucleotides and digested with BamHI or BsrGI (New England Biolabs), respectively. The final construct shows the 5â² overhang at roughly 0.5âkbp distance from the surface attachment handle.
DNA end resection and protection assays
DNA endonuclease assays with the MRN complex and pCtIP were performed in 15âµl volume in nuclease buffer containing 25âmM Tris-acetate pHâ7.5, 5âmM magnesium acetate, 1âmM manganese acetate, 1âmM ATP, 1âmM DTT, 0.25âmgâmlâ1 bovine serum albumin (BSA) (New England Biolabs), 1âmM phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), 80âUâmlâ1 pyruvate kinase (Sigma) and 1ânM substrate (in molecules). Biotinylated DNA ends were blocked by adding 15ânM monovalent streptavidin (a kind gift from M. Howarth, University of Oxford)64 and by incubating the samples at room temperature for 5âmin. Different from above, DNA exonuclease assays with recombinant MRE11âRAD50 were carried out in nuclease buffer containing 3âmM manganese acetate. Recombinant proteins were added on ice and the reactions were incubated at 37â°C for 2âh. Reactions were stopped by adding 0.5âµl of 0.5âM EDTA and 1âμl Proteinase K (Roche, 18âmgâmlâ1), and incubated at 50â°C for 30âmin. An equal amount of formamide dye (95% [v/v] formamide, 20âmM EDTA, bromophenol blue) was added, samples were heated at 95â°C for 4âmin and separated on 15% denaturing polyacrylamide gels (ratio acrylamide:bisacrylamide 19:1, BioRad). After fixing in a solution containing 40% methanol, 10% acetic acid and 5% glycerol for 30âmin, the gels were dried on 3MM paper (Whatman), exposed to storage phosphor screens (GE Healthcare) and scanned with Typhoon FLA 9500 Phosphor Imager (GE Healthcare).
DNA end-resection assays with PCR-based or pUC19-based dsDNA substrate were performed in a 15âµl volume in 25âmM Tris-acetate pHâ7.5, 2âmM magnesium acetate, 1âmM ATP, 1âmM DTT, 0.1âmgâmlâ1 BSA, 1âmM PEP, 80âUâmlâ1 pyruvate kinase and 1ânM substrate (in molecules). NaCl was added to the reaction buffer to a final concentration of 50âmM (unless indicated otherwise) taking into account the salt coming from protein storage or dilution buffers. When randomly labelled ssDNA was used, 2ânM substrate (in molecules) was used. Where indicated, AMP-PNP (Toronto Research Chemicals) or ATP-γ-S (Cayman Chemical) were used instead of ATP. Human RPA was included to saturate all ssDNA, as indicated. Further recombinant proteins were then added on ice and the reactions were incubated at 37â°C for 30âmin, unless indicated otherwise. Reactions were stopped by adding 5âµl of 2% stop solution (150âmM EDTA, 2% SDS, 30% glycerol, bromophenol blue) and 1âµl of Proteinase K (Roche, 18âmgâmlâ1) and incubated at 37â°C for 15âmin. Samples were analysed by 1% agarose gel electrophoresis. Gels were dried on DE81 chromatography paper (Whatman) and analysed as described above.
The nuclease assays with λ DNA/HindIII-based substrates were carried out similarly as described above with the following differences. DNA was used at 0.15ânM (in molecules), the reaction buffer contained 3âmM magnesium acetate, 30âmM NaCl and, unless indicated otherwise, reactions were incubated at 37â°C for 1âh. DNA protection assays with PCR-based dsDNA substrate were carried out as indicated above for the respective DNA end resection assays, except RAD51, BRCA1âBARD1 or BRCA1 were pre-incubated at 37â°C for 10âmin before the addition of the other recombinant proteins. Protection reactions were stopped by adding 0.5âµl of 0.5âM EDTA and 1âμl of Proteinase K (Roche, 18âmgâmlâ1), and incubated at 50â°C for 30âmin. An equal amount of formamide dye (95% [v/v] formamide, 20âmM EDTA, bromophenol blue) was added, and samples were heated at 95â°C for 4âmin and separated on 20% denaturing polyacrylamide gels (ratio acrylamide:bisacrylamide 19:1). After fixing in a solution containing 40% methanol, 10% acetic acid and 5% glycerol for 30âmin, the gels were dried on 3MM paper (Whatman) and analysed as described above. Protection assays with pUC19-based dsDNA substrate were carried out as indicated above for the respective DNA end resection assays. Signals were quantified using ImageJ2 (National Institutes of Health, NIH) and plotted with Prism 10 (GraphPad).
Helicase assays
Helicase assays with the oligonucleotide-based Y-structured DNA substrate were performed in 15âµl volume in reaction buffer (25âmM Tris-acetate pHâ7.5, 5âmM magnesium acetate, 1âmM ATP, 1âmM DTT, 0.1âmgâmlâ1 BSA, 1âmM PEP, 80âUâmlâ1 pyruvate kinase and 50âmM NaCl) with 0.1ânM DNA substrate (in molecules). Recombinant proteins were added as indicated. Reactions were incubated at 37â°C for 30âmin and stopped by adding 5âµl of 2% stop solution (150âmM EDTA, 2% SDS, 30% glycerol, bromophenol blue) and 1âµl of Proteinase K (Roche, 18âmgâmlâ1) and incubated at 37â°C for 10âmin. To avoid re-annealing of the substrate, the 2% stop solution was supplemented with a 20-fold excess of the unlabelled oligonucleotide with the same sequence as the 32P-labelled one. The products were separated by 10% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, dried on 17 CHR chromatography paper (Whatman) and analysed as described for resection assays. Helicase assays with PCR-based, pUC19-based dsDNA substrate or HindIII digest of λ DNA were performed as described for the respective DNA end resection assays. Signals were quantified using ImageJ2 (NIH) and plotted with Prism 10 (GraphPad).
ATPase assays
ATPase assays with recombinant WRN were performed in 25âmM Tris-acetate pHâ7.5, 5âmM magnesium acetate, 1âmM DTT, 0.1âmgâmlâ1 BSA, 1âmM ATP, 100âmM NaCl, 1ânM of (γ-32P)ATP (Hartmann Analytic) and 0.1ânM (in molecules) of the X12-3HJ3 oligonucleotide used to prepare the Y-structured DNA substrate used in the helicase assays. RPA and BRCA1âBARD1 or BRCA1 were added on ice and samples were pre-incubated at 37â°C for 10âmin. WRN was then added and reactions were incubated at 37â°C for 30âmin. ATPase assays with recombinant wild-type DNA2 and nuclease-dead DNA2 D277A were performed in 25âmM Tris-acetate pHâ7.5, 3âmM magnesium acetate, 1âmM DTT, 0.1âmgâmlâ1 BSA, 1âmM ATP, 20âmM NaCl, 1ânM of (γ-32P)ATP (Hartmann Analytic) and 0.32ânM (in molecules) of a heat-denatured 10.3âkbp-long dsDNA as a substrate. RPA and indicated proteins were added on ice and samples were incubated at 37â°C for 15âmin. Reactions were stopped with 1.1âµl of 0.5âM EDTA, and separated using thin layer chromatography plates (Merck) with 0.3âM LiCl and 0.3âM formic acid as the mobile phase. Dried plates were exposed to storage phosphor screens (GE Healthcare) and scanned with Typhoon FLA 9500 Phosphor Imager (GE Healthcare). Signals were quantified using ImageJ2 (NIH) and plotted with Prism 10 (GraphPad).
Protein-interaction assays
To test the interaction between BRCA1âBARD1 and WRN or EXO1, 1âμg of anti-BRCA1 antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, sc-6954) or anti-WRN antibody (Cell Signaling, 4666S) were captured on 10âμl Protein G magnetic beads (Dynabeads, Invitrogen) by incubating at 4â°C for 1âh with gentle rotation in 50âμl of PBS-T (PBS with 0.1% Tween-20, Sigma). The beads were washed twice on a magnetic rack with 150âμl of PBS-T. The beads were then mixed with 1âμg of the bait in 60âμl of immunoprecipitation buffer (25âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 1âmM DTT, 3âmM EDTA, 0.20âμgâμlâ1 BSA, 100âmM NaCl) and incubated at 4â°C for 1âh with gentle rotation. Beads were washed three times with 150âμl of wash buffer (25âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 1âmM DTT, 3âmM EDTA, 80âmM NaCl, 0.05% Triton-X, Sigma). Then 1âμg of the prey was added to the beads in 60âμl of immunoprecipitation buffer (25âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 1âmM DTT, 3âmM EDTA, 0.20âμgâμlâ1 BSA, 100âmM NaCl) and incubated at 4â°C for 1âh with gentle rotation. Beads were again washed three times with 150âμl of wash buffer (25âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 1âmM DTT, 3âmM EDTA, 80âmM NaCl, 0.05% Triton-X) and proteins were eluted by boiling the beads in SDS buffer (50âmM Tris-HCl pHâ6.8, 1.6% SDS, 100âmM DTT, 10% glycerol, 0.01% bromophenol blue) at 95â°C for 3âmin. Avidin (Sigma) was added to the eluate as a stabilizer. The eluate was separated on a 7.5% SDSâPAGE gel and proteins were detected by western blotting using anti-BRCA1 antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, sc-6954, 1:1,000), anti-His antibody (Invitrogen PA1-983B, 1:1,000) or anti-FLAG antibody (Sigma, F3165, 1:1,000). The final images were acquired with Fusion FX7 capture software (Vilber Imaging).
Mass photometry characterization of protein complexes
Mass photometry measurements were performed on a TwoMP mass photometer (Refeyn Ltd). First, borosilicate microscope glass plate (No. 1.5 H thickness, 24âÃâ50âmm, VWR) were cleaned by sequential soaking in Milli-Q-water, isopropanol and Milli-Q-water followed by drying under a stream of clean nitrogen. Next, silicone gaskets (CultureWell Reusable Gasket, Grace Bio-Labs) were placed on the clean coverslip to create a defined well for sample delivery. To convert optical reflection-interference contrast into a molecular mass, a known protein size marker (NativeMark Unstained Protein Standard, Invitrogen) was measured on the same day. For mass measurements, gaskets were filled with 18âμl of measurement buffer (25âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 1âmM ATP, 3âmM magnesium acetate) to allow focusing the microscope onto the coverslip surface. Subsequently, 40ânM of either BRCA1 or BRCA1âBARD1 were added into the well (final volume, 20âμl) and sample binding to the coverslip surface was monitored for 1âmin using the software AcquireMP (Refeyn Ltd). Data analysis was performed using DiscoverMP software (Refeyn Ltd).
Single-molecule magnetic tweezer experiments
Single-molecule magnetic tweezer experiments were carried out in a custom-built magnetic tweezers setup and operated using a self-developed code in Labview (2016, National Instruments)65. The DNA constructs were linked at their biotinylated ends with streptavidin-coated magnetic beads (Dynabeads M280, Thermo Fisher Scientific) and flushed into the flow cell, where the bottom slide was coated with antidigoxigenin to ensure surface-specific binding. Moving the magnet closer to the flow cell resulted in the stretching of the DNA molecules that were attached to a magnetic bead. Tracking of the magnetic beads for all measurements was conducted at 300âHz using video microscopy and real-time GPU-accelerated image analysis66. The magnetic forces were calibrated based on fluctuation analysis67. The measurements were performed in a reaction buffer (25âmM Tris-acetate pHâ7.5, 2âmM magnesium acetate, 1âmM ATP, 1âmM DTT, 0.1âmgâmlâ1 BSA), with the indicated protein concentrations at a temperature of 37â°C and forces between 15 and 25âpN. The analysis of the recorded traces was conducted with a custom written MATLAB program68. We considered only traces from measurements in which the magnetic bead position was traceable for at least 300âs. The acquired processivity and velocity for the unwinding events were calculated by fitting linear segments to parts of the recorded traces with roughly constant velocity, which were used to construct the histograms and for statistical analysis. To quantify the ratio of rewinding/unwinding events, the total number of the two events, acquired as described above, was determined for a fixed period of 300âs for each recorded trace. To characterize the different protein combinations (Fig. 3c) and WRN variants (Extended Data Fig. 7e), the difference between the maximum value and the minimum value of DNA extension for a given molecule was calculated during the first 300âs and expressed as ÎDNA-length. Each dot represents one measured molecule.
Cell lines
The RPE1 hTERT were purchased from American Type Culture Collection (ATCC). The RPE1 hTERT PACâ/âTP53â/â cell line (referred to as RPE1 EXO1+/+ in this paper)45 was used to generate RPE1 hTERT PACâ/âTP53â/âEXO1â/â (referred to as RPE1 EXO1â/â) cells by nucleofection of pLentiCRISPR_v2 containing the sgEXO1 (GCGTGGGATTGGATTAGCAA) as described before45. After clonal selection, genotyping was performed to confirm indel formation using target locus PCR amplification and Sanger sequencing, followed by TIDE (tracking of indels by decomposition) analysis. RPE1 EXO1+/+ and EXO1â/â cells inducibly expressing exogenous CtIP-WT or CtIP-S327A were obtained by viral transduction with pCW57.1_Zeo-CtIP-WT-2ÃFLAG or pCW57.1_Zeo-CtIP-S327A-2ÃFLAG.
U2OS cells were originally bought from ATCC. U2OS-derived cells, carrying green fluorescent protein (GFP), GFP-CtIP-WT or GFP-CtIP-S327A mutant16, were grown in DMEM medium (Sigma). Media were supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Sigma), 2âmM l-glutamine (Sigma), 100âUâmlâ1 penicillin and 100âμgâmlâ1 streptomycin (Sigma). U2OS cells were last authenticated in June 2024 by the GenePrint 10 System (Promega) using short tandem repeat profiling, and data were analysed using genemapper id-x v.1.2 software (Applied Biosystems) at the genomic core facility of the Instituto de Investigaciones Biomedicas Sols-Morreale. All cell lines were routinely tested for mycoplasm contamination. All the experiments performed here used mycoplasm-free cell lines.
Viral transductions and transfections
Third-generation packaging vectors pMDLg/pRRE, pRSV-Rev, pMD2.g and a lentiviral expression vector (pLentiCRISPR-v2 or pCW57.1) were transfected to human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293T using jetPEI (Polyplus Transfection) to produce lentiviral particles. The HEK 293T cell line was originally purchased from ATCC. The medium was refreshed 16âh post-transfection. Viral supernatants were harvested 48âh post-transfection, filtered with a 0.45âmm filter and transduced into cells at a multiplicity of infection of 1 in the presence of 4âμgâmlâ1 polybrene. Puromycin (2âμgâmlâ1) and zeocin (400âμgâmlâ1) were used for the selection of pLentiCRISPR- and pCW57.1- transduced RPE1 cells, respectively.
Clonogenic survival assays
RPE1 EXO1+/+ or EXO1â/â cells transduced with CtIP-WT or CtIP-S327A were induced with doxycycline (2âμgâmlâ1) to express CtIP protein exogenously. Cells were virally transduced with pLentiCRISPR-sgCtIP or empty vector to deplete endogenous CtIP 24âh post-doxycycline induction. After 48âh of puromycin selection to select for pLentiCRISPR transduced cells, 500âcells were seeded in 10-cm dishes for clonogenic growth. Medium containing doxycycline (2âμgâmlâ1) was refreshed after 7âdays. After 14âdays, colonies were stained with crystal violet solution (0.4% [w/v], 20% methanol) and counted manually. Simultaneously with plating cells for clonogenic survival, cells were collected for immunoblotting analysis and lysed in RIPA lysis buffer (1% NP40, 50âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 150âmM NaCl, 0.1% SDS, 3âmM MgCl2, 0.5% sodium deoxycholate) supplemented with Complete Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (Sigma) and 100âUâmlâ1 Benzonase (Sigma). Western blots were stained with primary antibodies against CtIP (Millipore, MABE1060, 1:2,000), FLAG (Sigma, F1804-200UG, 1:2,000), EXO1 (Abcam, ab95068, 1:1,000) and α-Tubulin (Sigma, T6199, 1:5,000); and with HRP-conjugated secondary antibodies donkey anti-rabbit IgG-HRP (Thermo Scientific, 31458, 1:5,000) or goat anti-mouse IgG-HRP (Thermo Scientific, 31432, 1:5,000).
Immunofluorescence and microscopy
For RPA foci visualization, U2OS-derived cells were seeded on coverslips. For the experiment with DNA2 inhibitor C5 (MedChemExpress, catalogue no. HY128729), 20âμM of the inhibitor or the same amount of vehicle (dimethylsulfoxide, DMSO) were added to the plates 6âh before irradiation. Then 1âh after irradiation (10âGy), coverslips were washed once with PBS followed by treatment with pre-extraction buffer (25âmM Tris-HCl pHâ7.5, 50âmM NaCl, 1âmM EDTA, 3âmM MgCl2, 300âmM sucrose and 0.2% Triton-X-100) for 5âmin on ice. Cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde [w/v] in PBS for 20âmin. Following two washes with PBS, cells were blocked for 1âh with 5% fetal bovine serum in PBS, costained with the appropriate primary antibodies (RPA2, Abcam, ab2175, 1:500) in blocking solution overnight at 4â°C or for 2âh at room temperature, washed again with PBS and then co-immuno-stained with the appropriate secondary antibodies (Alexa Fluor 594 goat anti-mouse, Invitrogen, A11032, 1:500 and Alexa Fluor 488 goat anti-rabbit, Invitrogen, A11034, 1:500) in blocking buffer. After washing with PBS, coverslips were incubated sequentially in 70% and 100% ethanol to dehydrate them. Finally, they were air dried and mounted into glass slides using Vectashield mounting medium with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (Vector Laboratories). RPA foci immunofluorescence was analysed using a Leica DM6000B Fluorescence microscope (AF6000).
Cell-cycle analysis
Cells were trypsinized and fixed with cold 70% ethanol overnight, incubated with 250âμgâmlâ1 RNase A (Sigma) and 10âμgâmlâ1 propidium iodide (Fluka) at 37â°C for 30âmin and analysed with a LSRFortessaTM Cell Analyzer (BD) Flow Cytometer. Cell-cycle distribution data were further analysed using ModFit LT v.5.0 software (Verity Software House Inc.).
Statistics and reproducibility
Sample size or number of technical (for biochemical assays) and biological (for cellular assays) replicates were chosen on the basis of what is common in the field and what was practical to do. A minimum of three independent replicates were performed for each biochemical experiment to add statistical analysis, when required. Where indicated, a representative experiment from independent repeats with similar results was shown. Coomassie-stained protein gels were repeated twice to confirm the quality and the concentration of the indicated recombinant proteins. Protein-interaction assays were performed twice.
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Portfolio Reporting Summary linked to this article.