RNA polymerase II processing facilitates DNA repair and prevents DNA damage-induced neuronal and developmental failure
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Hereditary transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (TC-NER) defects cause severe developmental and neurodegenerative features, as observed in Cockayne syndrome (CS), or mild cutaneous UV sensitivity, as observed in UV-sensitive syndrome. The mechanisms underlying the strikingly different clinical features of these syndromes are not fully understood. Using C. elegans , we demonstrate that TC-NER deficiency leads to DNA damage-induced motoneuronal and developmental failure, primarily caused by the lack of lesion removal due to persistent lesion-stalling of RNA polymerase II. If, in the absence of TC-NER, lesion-stalled RNA polymerase II is processed and removed, global genome NER acts as backup pathway to repair transcription-blocking lesions and prevents DNA damage-induced developmental failure. Our results furthermore show that processing of lesion-stalled RNA Polymerase II facilitates TC-NER and involves the activity of multiple E3 ubiquitin ligases. These findings reveal that persistently stalled RNA polymerase II, rather than TC-NER deficiency, is the major driver of severe disease features associated with TC-NER defects.