Break‐induced replication plays a prominent role in long‐range repeat‐mediated deletion

Chromosome Aberrations DNA Replication 0303 health sciences Base Sequence DNA Repair Recombinational DNA Repair Oncogenes DNA-Binding Proteins Histones Gene Knockout Techniques Mice 03 medical and health sciences HEK293 Cells MutS Homolog 2 Protein Neoplasms Animals Humans DNA Breaks, Single-Stranded Embryonic Stem Cells Sequence Deletion
DOI: 10.15252/embj.2019101751 Publication Date: 2019-10-01T08:43:40Z
ABSTRACT
Repetitive DNA sequences are often associated with chromosomal rearrangements in cancers. Conventionally, single-strand annealing (SSA) is thought to mediate homology-directed repair of double-strand breaks (DSBs) between two repeats, causing repeat-mediated deletion (RMD). In this report, we demonstrate that break-induced replication (BIR) is used predominantly over SSA in mammalian cells for mediating RMD, especially when repeats are far apart. We show that SSA becomes inefficient in mammalian cells when the distance between the DSBs and the repeats is increased to the 1-2 kb range, while BIR-mediated RMD (BIR/RMD) can act over a long distance (e.g., ~ 100-200 kb) when the DSB is close to one repeat. Importantly, oncogene expression potentiates BIR/RMD but not SSA, and BIR/RMD is used more frequently at single-ended DSBs formed at collapsed replication forks than at double-ended DSBs. In contrast to short-range SSA, H2AX is required for long-range BIR/RMD, and sequence divergence strongly suppresses BIR/RMD in a manner partially dependent on MSH2. Our finding that BIR/RMD has a more important role than SSA in mammalian cells has a significant impact on the understanding of repeat-mediated rearrangements associated with oncogenesis.
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