The interplay of the translocase activity and protein recruitment function of PICH in ultrafine anaphase bridge resolution and genomic stability

Nucleic Acids Res. 2024 Dec 19:gkae1249. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkae1249. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Incomplete sister centromere decatenation results in centromeric ultrafine anaphase bridges (UFBs). PICH (PLK1-interacting checkpoint helicase), a DNA translocase, plays a crucial role in UFB resolution by recruiting UFB-binding proteins and stimulating topoisomerase IIα. However, the involvement of distinct PICH functions in UFB resolution remains ambiguous. Here, we demonstrate that PICH depletion in non-transformed diploid cells induces DNA damage, micronuclei formation, p53 activation, G1-phase delay and cell death. Whole-genome sequencing reveals that segregation defects induced by PICH depletion cause chromosomal rearrangements, including translocations and inversions, emphasizing its significance in preserving genomic integrity. Furthermore, a PICH mutant that impairs UFB recruitment of BLM and RIF1 partially inhibits UFB resolution while a translocase-inactive mutant (PICHK128A) fails to resolve UFBs. Notably, expression of PICHK128A inhibits single-stranded UFB formation and induces hypocondensed chromosomes. We propose that PICH's translocase activity plays a dual role in promoting UFB resolution by facilitating the generation of single-stranded UFBs and stimulating topoisomerase IIα.