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Breakage of cytoplasmic chromosomes by pathological DNA base excision repair

Shangming Tang, Ema Stokasimov, Yuxiang Cui and David Pellman ()
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Shangming Tang: Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Ema Stokasimov: Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Yuxiang Cui: University of California, Riverside
David Pellman: Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Nature, 2022, vol. 606, issue 7916, 930-936

Abstract: Abstract Chromothripsis is a catastrophic mutational process that promotes tumorigenesis and causes congenital disease1–4. Chromothripsis originates from aberrations of nuclei called micronuclei or chromosome bridges5–8. These structures are associated with fragile nuclear envelopes that spontaneously rupture9,10, leading to DNA damage when chromatin is exposed to the interphase cytoplasm. Here we identify a mechanism explaining a major fraction of this DNA damage. Micronuclei accumulate large amounts of RNA–DNA hybrids, which are edited by adenine deaminases acting on RNA (ADAR enzymes) to generate deoxyinosine. Deoxyinosine is then converted into abasic sites by a DNA base excision repair (BER) glycosylase, N-methyl-purine DNA glycosylase11,12 (MPG). These abasic sites are cleaved by the BER endonuclease, apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease12 (APE1), creating single-stranded DNA nicks that can be converted to DNA double strand breaks by DNA replication or when closely spaced nicks occur on opposite strands13,14. This model predicts that MPG should be able to remove the deoxyinosine base from the DNA strand of RNA–DNA hybrids, which we demonstrate using purified proteins and oligonucleotide substrates. These findings identify a mechanism for fragmentation of micronuclear chromosomes, an important step in generating chromothripsis. Rather than breaking any normal chromosome, we propose that the eukaryotic cytoplasm only damages chromosomes with pre-existing defects such as the DNA base abnormality described here.

Date: 2022
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04767-1

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