Replication Stress Induces Global Chromosome Breakage in the Fragile X Genome
Author(s) -
Arijita Chakraborty,
Piroon Jenjaroenpun,
Jing Li,
Sami El Hilali,
Andrew McCulley,
Brian K. Haarer,
Elizabeth A. Hoffman,
Aimee Belak,
Audrey Thorland,
Heidi Hehnly,
Carl L. Schildkraut,
Chun-Long Chen,
Vladimir A. Kuznetsov,
Wenyi Feng
Publication year - 2020
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.2020.108179
Subject(s) - fragile x syndrome , biology , genome instability , genetics , dna replication , genome , microbiology and biotechnology , transcription (linguistics) , fmr1 , gene , dna , dna damage , fragile x , linguistics , philosophy
Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder caused by mutations in the FMR1 gene and deficiency of a functional FMRP protein. FMRP is known as a translation repressor whose nuclear function is not understood. We investigated the global impact on genome stability due to FMRP loss. Using Break-seq, we map spontaneous and replication stress-induced DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) in an FXS patient-derived cell line. We report that the genomes of FXS cells are inherently unstable and accumulate twice as many DSBs as those from an unaffected control. We demonstrate that replication stress-induced DSBs in FXS cells colocalize with R-loop forming sequences. Exogenously expressed FMRP in FXS fibroblasts ameliorates DSB formation. FMRP, not the I304N mutant, abates R-loop-induced DSBs during programmed replication-transcription conflict. These results suggest that FMRP is a genome maintenance protein that prevents R-loop accumulation. Our study provides insights into the etiological basis for FXS.
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