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A Class of Environmental and Endogenous Toxins Induces BRCA2 Haploinsufficiency and Genome Instability
Author(s) -
Shawn Lu Wen Tan,
Saakshi Chadha,
Yansheng Liu,
Evelina Gabašová,
David Perera,
Karim Ahmed,
Stephanie Constantinou,
Xavier Renaudin,
Mi-Young Lee,
Ruedi Aebersold,
Ashok R. Venkitaraman
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2017.05.010
Subject(s) - biology , haploinsufficiency , genome instability , endogeny , genetics , genome , class (philosophy) , computational biology , gene , dna , dna damage , phenotype , biochemistry , artificial intelligence , computer science
Mutations truncating a single copy of the tumor suppressor, BRCA2, cause cancer susceptibility. In cells bearing such heterozygous mutations, we find that a cellular metabolite and ubiquitous environmental toxin, formaldehyde, stalls and destabilizes DNA replication forks, engendering structural chromosomal aberrations. Formaldehyde selectively depletes BRCA2 via proteasomal degradation, a mechanism of toxicity that affects very few additional cellular proteins. Heterozygous BRCA2 truncations, by lowering pre-existing BRCA2 expression, sensitize to BRCA2 haploinsufficiency induced by transient exposure to natural concentrations of formaldehyde. Acetaldehyde, an alcohol catabolite detoxified by ALDH2, precipitates similar effects. Ribonuclease H1 ameliorates replication fork instability and chromosomal aberrations provoked by aldehyde-induced BRCA2 haploinsufficiency, suggesting that BRCA2 inactivation triggers spontaneous mutagenesis during DNA replication via aberrant RNA-DNA hybrids (R-loops). These findings suggest a model wherein carcinogenesis in BRCA2 mutation carriers can be incited by compounds found pervasively in the environment and generated endogenously in certain tissues with implications for public health.

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