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Replication catastrophe induced by cyclic hypoxia leads to increased APOBEC3B activity
Author(s) -
Samuel B. Bader,
Stephen T. Tiffany,
Charlotte J Simpson,
Jiachen Liang,
Sakura Eri B Maezono,
Monica M. Olcina,
Francesca M. Buffa,
Ester M. Hammond
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkab551
Subject(s) - apobec , biology , hypoxia (environmental) , genome instability , dna damage , dna replication , cancer research , genetics , dna , gene , oxygen , genome , chemistry , organic chemistry
Tumor heterogeneity includes variable and fluctuating oxygen concentrations, which result in the accumulation of hypoxic regions in most solid tumors. Tumor hypoxia leads to increased therapy resistance and has been linked to genomic instability. Here, we tested the hypothesis that exposure to levels of hypoxia that cause replication stress could increase APOBEC activity and the accumulation of APOBEC-mediated mutations. APOBEC-dependent mutational signatures have been well-characterized, although the physiological conditions which underpin them have not been described. We demonstrate that fluctuating/cyclic hypoxic conditions which lead to replication catastrophe induce the expression and activity of APOBEC3B. In contrast, stable/chronic hypoxic conditions which induce replication stress in the absence of DNA damage are not sufficient to induce APOBEC3B. Most importantly, the number of APOBEC-mediated mutations in patient tumors correlated with a hypoxia signature. Together, our data support the conclusion that hypoxia-induced replication catastrophe drives genomic instability in tumors, specifically through increasing the activity of APOBEC3B.

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