- Yang, Yongfei;
- He, Shanshan;
- Wang, Qiaoxiu;
- Li, Fan;
- Kwak, Mi-Jeong;
- Chen, Sally;
- O’Connell, Douglas;
- Zhang, Tian;
- Pirooz, Sara Dolatshahi;
- Jeon, YongHeui;
- Chimge, Nyam-Osor;
- Frenkel, Baruch;
- Choi, Younho;
- Aldrovandi, Grace M;
- Oh, Byung-Ha;
- Yuan, Zengqiang;
- Liang, Chengyu
UV-induced DNA damage, a major risk factor for skin cancers, is primarily repaired by nucleotide excision repair (NER). UV radiation resistance-associated gene (UVRAG) is a tumor suppressor involved in autophagy. It was initially isolated as a cDNA partially complementing UV sensitivity in xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), but this was not explored further. Here we show that UVRAG plays an integral role in UV-induced DNA damage repair. It localizes to photolesions and associates with DDB1 to promote the assembly and activity of the DDB2-DDB1-Cul4A-Roc1 (CRL4(DDB2)) ubiquitin ligase complex, leading to efficient XPC recruitment and global genomic NER. UVRAG depletion decreased substrate handover to XPC and conferred UV-damage hypersensitivity. We confirmed the importance of UVRAG for UV-damage tolerance using a Drosophila model. Furthermore, increased UV-signature mutations in melanoma correlate with reduced expression of UVRAG. Our results identify UVRAG as a regulator of CRL4(DDB2)-mediated NER and suggest that its expression levels may influence melanoma predisposition.