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MORC2 phosphorylation fine tunes its DNA compaction activity

Winnie Tan et al. bioRxiv. .

Update in

  • MORC2 is a phosphorylation-dependent DNA compaction machine.
    Tan W, Park J, Venugopal H, Lou J, Dias PS, Baldoni PL, Moon KW, Dite TA, Keenan CR, Gurzau AD, Lee J, Johanson TM, Leis A, Yousef J, Vaibhav V, Dagley LF, Ang CS, Corso LD, Davidovich C, Vervoort SJ, Smyth GK, Blewitt ME, Allan RS, Hinde E, D'Arcy S, Ryu JK, Shakeel S. Tan W, et al. Nat Commun. 2025 Jul 1;16(1):5606. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-60751-z. Nat Commun. 2025. PMID: 40593625 Free PMC article.

Abstract

Variants in the poorly characterised oncoprotein, MORC2, a chromatin remodelling ATPase, lead to defects in epigenetic regulation and DNA damage response. The C-terminal domain (CTD) of MORC2, frequently phosphorylated in DNA damage, promotes cancer progression, but its role in chromatin remodelling remains unclear. Here, we report a molecular characterisation of full-length, phosphorylated MORC2, demonstrating its preference for binding open chromatin and functioning as a DNA sliding clamp. We identified a phosphate interacting motif within the CTD that dictates ATP hydrolysis rate and cooperative DNA binding. The DNA binding impacts several structural domains within the ATPase region. We provide the first visual proof that MORC2 induces chromatin remodelling through ATP hydrolysis-dependent DNA compaction, regulated by its phosphorylation state. These findings highlight phosphorylation of MORC2 CTD as a key modulator of chromatin remodelling, presenting it as a potential therapeutic target.

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