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CITK modulates BRCA1 recruitment at DNA double strand breaks sites through HDAC6

Authors: 
Iegiani G, Pallavicini G, Pezzotta A, Brix A, Ferraro A, Gai M, Boda E, Bielas SL, Pistocchi A, Di Cunto F
Citation: 
Cell Death Dis. 2025 Apr 20;16(1):320. doi: 10.1038/s41419-025-07655-4. PMID: 40254670; PMCID: PMC12009987
Abstract: 
Citron Kinase (CITK) is a protein encoded by the CIT gene, whose pathogenic variants underlie microcephalic phenotypes that characterize MCPH17 syndrome. In neural progenitors, CITK loss leads to microtubule instability, resulting in mitotic spindle positioning defects, cytokinesis failure, and accumulation of DNA double strand breaks (DSBs), ultimately resulting in TP53-dependent senescence and apoptosis. Although DNA damage accumulation has been associated with impaired homologous recombination (HR), the role of CITK in this process and whether microtubule dynamics are involved is still unknown. In this report we show that CITK is required for proper BRCA1 localization at sites of DNA DSBs. We found that CITK's scaffolding, rather than its catalytic activity, is necessary for maintaining BRCA1 interphase levels in progenitor cells during neurodevelopment. CITK regulates the nuclear levels of HDAC6, a modulator of both microtubule stability and DNA damage repair. Targeting HDAC6 in CITK-deficient cells increases microtubule stability and recovers BRCA1 localization defects and DNA damage levels to that detected in controls. In addition, the CIT-HDAC6 axis is functionally relevant in a MCPH17 zebrafish model, as HDAC6 targeting recovers the head size phenotype produced by interfering with the CIT orthologue gene. These data provide novel insights into the functional interplay between HR and microtubule dynamics and into the pathogenesis of CITK based MCPH17, which may be relevant for development of therapeutic strategies.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
zebrafish
Delivery Method: 
microinjection