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Volume 30 Issue 12, December 2023

UBXD1 cracks the p97 ring open

A study from Braxton et al. reports how the UBXD1 adapter remodels and opens the hexamer ring of p97/VCP, revealing its regulatory role.

See Braxton et al.

Image Credit: TorriPhoto / Moment / Getty images. Cover Design: Allen Beattie

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  • As 2023 comes to an end, we take this opportunity to look back through the pages of Nature Structural & Molecular Biology and consider some of the year’s highlights.

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  • DNA polymerase θ (POLQ) repairs mitotic DNA breaks; this requires RHINO and PLK1, averts genomic instability and may underlie effects of POLQ inhibitors in HDR-deficient cancer cells. We discuss recent work on mitotic DNA break processing and repair, the need for multiple DSB repair pathways and implications of therapeutic POLQ targeting in cancer.

    • Marcel A. T. M. van Vugt
    • Marcel Tijsterman
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  • An Ago2HA/HA mouse model combined with super-resolution microscopy, molecular and biochemical assays allowed us to stringently characterize AGO2 regulation in vivo. We found that in quiescent splenocytes, AGO2 localizes almost exclusively to the nucleus, where it binds to the RNA of young mobile transposons and represses their expression through its catalytic domain.

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  • We describe how transcription start site (TSS) choice of thousands of genes results in transcript isoforms with potential for distinct post-transcriptional regulation affecting translation and cell behavior. We show that dynamic switching between initiation sites defines cancer proliferation, differentiation and treatment response, indicating start site determination as a potential diagnostic tool.

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  • The human ATPase p97 (also known as VCP) unfolds protein substrates by translocating them through its central channel. This process is highly regulated by numerous adapter proteins. Structures of p97 in complex with the unusual adapter UBXD1 reveal how this protein coordinates p97 hexamer remodeling and ring opening by expansive interactions across multiple p97 protomers.

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