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Disrupted control of origin activation compromises genome integrity upon destabilization of Polε and dysfunction of the TRP53-CDKN1A/P21 axis

Authors :
Valerie Borel
Stefan Boeing
Niek Van Wietmarschen
Sriram Sridharan
Bethany Rebekah Hill
Luigi Ombrato
Jimena Perez-Lloret
Deb Jackson
Robert Goldstone
Simon J. Boulton
Andre Nussenzweig
Roberto Bellelli
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
The Francis Crick Institute, 2022.

Abstract

The maintenance of genome stability relies on coordinated control of origin activation and replication fork progression. How the interplay between these processes influences human genetic disease and cancer remains incompletely characterized. Here we show that mouse cells featuring Polε instability exhibit impaired genome-wide activation of DNA replication origins, in an origin-location-independent manner. Strikingly, Trp53 ablation in primary Polε hypomorphic cells increased Polε levels and origin activation and reduced DNA damage in a transcription-dependent manner. Transcriptome analysis of primary Trp53 knockout cells revealed that the TRP53-CDKN1A/P21 axis maintains appropriate levels of replication factors and CDK activity during unchallenged S phase. Loss of this control mechanism deregulates origin activation and perturbs genome-wide replication fork progression. Thus, while our data support an impaired origin activation model for genetic diseases affecting CMG formation, we propose that loss of the TRP53-CDKN1A/P21 tumor suppressor axis induces inappropriate origin activation and deregulates genome-wide fork progression.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....05cd3dfe1365b41e1240ae5517cf093a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.25418/crick.20025989.v1