@article {van Schiee202201596, author = {Janne JM van Schie and Klaas de Lint and Govind M Pai and Martin A Rooimans and Rob MF Wolthuis and Job de Lange}, title = {MMS22L-TONSL functions in sister chromatid cohesion in a pathway parallel to DSCC1-RFC}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, elocation-id = {e202201596}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.26508/lsa.202201596}, publisher = {Life Science Alliance}, abstract = {The leading strand{\textendash}oriented alternative PCNA clamp loader DSCC1-RFC functions in DNA replication, repair, and sister chromatid cohesion (SCC), but how it facilitates these processes is incompletely understood. Here, we confirm that loss of human DSCC1 results in reduced fork speed, increased DNA damage, and defective SCC. Genome-wide CRISPR screens in DSCC1-KO cells reveal multiple synthetically lethal interactions, enriched for DNA replication and cell cycle regulation. We show that DSCC1-KO cells require POLE3 for survival. Co-depletion of DSCC1 and POLE3, which both interact with the catalytic polymerase ε subunit, additively impair DNA replication, suggesting that these factors contribute to leading-strand DNA replication in parallel ways. An additional hit is MMS22L, which in humans forms a heterodimer with TONSL. Synthetic lethality of DSCC1 and MMS22L-TONSL likely results from detrimental SCC loss. We show that MMS22L-TONSL, like DDX11, functions in a SCC establishment pathway parallel to DSCC1-RFC. Because both DSCC1-RFC and MMS22L facilitate ESCO2 recruitment to replication forks, we suggest that distinct ESCO2 recruitment pathways promote SCC establishment following either cohesin conversion or de novo cohesin loading.}, URL = {https://www.life-science-alliance.org/content/6/2/e202201596}, eprint = {https://www.life-science-alliance.org/content/6/2/e202201596.full.pdf}, journal = {Life Science Alliance} }