Transcription Restores DNA Repair to Heterochromatin, Determining Regional Mutation Rates in Cancer Genomes
Author(s) -
Christina Zheng,
Nicholas J. Wang,
Jongsuk Chung,
Homayoun Moslehi,
J. Zachary Sanborn,
Joseph Hur,
Eric A. Collisson,
Swapna S. Vemula,
Agne Naujokas,
Kami Chiotti,
Jeffrey B. Cheng,
Hiva Fassihi,
Andrew J. Blumberg,
Celeste Bailey,
Gary M. Fudem,
Frederick G. Mihm,
Bari B. Cunningham,
Isaac Neuhaus,
Wilson Liao,
Dennis H. Oh,
James E. Cleaver,
Philip E. LeBoit,
J Costello,
Alan R. Lehmann,
Joe W. Gray,
Paul T. Spellman,
Sarah T. Arron,
Nam Huh,
Elizabeth Purdom,
Raymond J. Cho
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2014.10.031
Subject(s) - chromatin , biology , genetics , nucleotide excision repair , heterochromatin , dna repair , genome , transcription (linguistics) , mutation rate , dna , gene , mutation , linguistics , philosophy
Somatic mutations in cancer are more frequent in heterochromatic and late-replicating regions of the genome. We report that regional disparities in mutation density are virtually abolished within transcriptionally silent genomic regions of cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas (cSCCs) arising in an XPC(-/-) background. XPC(-/-) cells lack global genome nucleotide excision repair (GG-NER), thus establishing differential access of DNA repair machinery within chromatin-rich regions of the genome as the primary cause for the regional disparity. Strikingly, we find that increasing levels of transcription reduce mutation prevalence on both strands of gene bodies embedded within H3K9me3-dense regions, and only to those levels observed in H3K9me3-sparse regions, also in an XPC-dependent manner. Therefore, transcription appears to reduce mutation prevalence specifically by relieving the constraints imposed by chromatin structure on DNA repair. We model this relationship among transcription, chromatin state, and DNA repair, revealing a new, personalized determinant of cancer risk.
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