Failure of Origin Activation in Response to Fork Stalling Leads to Chromosomal Instability at Fragile Sites
DNA Replication
0303 health sciences
03 medical and health sciences
Models, Genetic
Chromosomal Instability
Chromosome Fragile Sites
Humans
Replication Origin
Cell Biology
Molecular Biology
Chromosomes
Cell Line
DOI:
10.1016/j.molcel.2011.05.019
Publication Date:
2011-07-08T21:06:03Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
Perturbed DNA replication in early stages of cancer development induces chromosomal instability preferentially at fragile sites. However, the molecular basis for this instability is unknown. Here, we show that even under normal growth conditions, replication fork progression along the fragile site, FRA16C, is slow and forks frequently stall at AT-rich sequences, leading to activation of additional origins to enable replication completion. Under mild replication stress, the frequency of stalling at AT-rich sequences is further increased. Strikingly, unlike in the entire genome, in the FRA16C region additional origins are not activated, suggesting that all potential origins are already activated under normal conditions. Thus, the basis for FRA16C fragility is replication fork stalling at AT-rich sequences and inability to activate additional origins under replication stress. Our results provide a mechanism explaining the replication stress sensitivity of fragile sites and thus, the basis for genomic instability during early stages of cancer development.
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