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Replication fork integrity and intra-S phase checkpoint suppress gene amplification
Author(s) -
Anna A. Kondratova,
Takaaki Watanabe,
Michael Marotta,
Matthew Can,
Anca M. Segall,
David Serre,
Hisashi Tanaka
Publication year - 2015
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/gkv084
Subject(s) - biology , control of chromosome duplication , dna replication , origin recognition complex , dna replication factor cdt1 , dna re replication , dna repair , s phase , gene duplication , replication factor c , gene , microbiology and biotechnology , eukaryotic dna replication , replication protein a , dna damage , homologous recombination , pre replication complex , genetics , cell cycle , dna , dna binding protein , transcription factor
Gene amplification is a phenotype-causing form of chromosome instability and is initiated by DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Cells with mutant p53 lose G1/S checkpoint and are permissive to gene amplification. In this study we show that mammalian cells become proficient for spontaneous gene amplification when the function of the DSB repair protein complex MRN (Mre11/Rad50/Nbs1) is impaired. Cells with impaired MRN complex experienced severe replication stress and gained substrates for gene amplification during replication, as evidenced by the increase of replication-associated single-stranded breaks that were converted to DSBs most likely through replication fork reversal. Impaired MRN complex directly compromised ATM/ATR-mediated checkpoints and allowed cells to progress through cell cycle in the presence of DSBs. Such compromised intra-S phase checkpoints promoted gene amplification independently from mutant p53. Finally, cells adapted to endogenous replication stress by globally suppressing genes for DNA replication and cell cycle progression. Our results indicate that the MRN complex suppresses gene amplification by stabilizing replication forks and by securing DNA damage response to replication-associated DSBs.

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