Literature DB >> 14574643

Replication inhibitors modulate instability of an expanded trinucleotide repeat at the myotonic dystrophy type 1 disease locus in human cells.

Zhi Yang1, Rachel Lau, Julien L Marcadier, David Chitayat, Christopher E Pearson.   

Abstract

Gene-specific CTG/CAG repeat expansion is associated with at least 14 human diseases, including myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1). Most of our understanding of trinucleotide instability is from nonhuman models, which have presented mixed results, supporting replication errors or processes independent of cell division as causes. Nevertheless, the mechanism occurring at the disease loci in patient cells is poorly understood. Using primary fibroblasts derived from a fetus with DM1, we have shown that spontaneous expansion of the diseased (CTG)(216) allele occurred in proliferating cells but not in quiescent cells. Expansions were "synchronous," with mutation frequencies approaching 100%. Furthermore, cells were treated with agents known to alter DNA synthesis but not to directly damage DNA. Inhibiting replication initiation with mimosine had no effect upon instability. Inhibiting both leading- and lagging-strand synthesis with aphidicolin or blocking only lagging strand synthesis with emetine significantly enhanced CTG expansions. It was striking that only the expanded DM1 allele was altered, leaving the normal allele, (CTG)(12), and other repeat loci unaffected. Standard and small-pool polymerase chain reaction revealed that inhibitors enhanced the magnitude of short expansions in most cells threefold, whereas 11%-25% of cells experienced gains of 122-170 repeats, to sizes of (CTG)(338)-(CTG)(386). Similar results were observed for an adult DM1 cell line. Our results support a role for the perturbation of replication fork dynamics in DM1 CTG expansions within patient fibroblasts. This is the first report that repeat-length alterations specific to a disease allele can be modulated by exogenously added compounds.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14574643      PMCID: PMC1180489          DOI: 10.1086/379523

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Hum Genet        ISSN: 0002-9297            Impact factor:   11.025


  55 in total

1.  Stability of triplet repeats of myotonic dystrophy and fragile X loci in human mutator mismatch repair cell lines.

Authors:  P R Kramer; C E Pearson; R R Sinden
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  1996-08       Impact factor: 4.132

2.  Inability to induce fragile sites at CTG repeats in congenital myotonic dystrophy.

Authors:  S L Wenger; C A Giangreco; J Tarleton; H B Wessel
Journal:  Am J Med Genet       Date:  1996-12-02

3.  Instability of the expanded (CTG)n repeats in the myotonin protein kinase gene in cultured lymphoblastoid cell lines from patients with myotonic dystrophy.

Authors:  T Ashizawa; D G Monckton; S Vaishnav; B J Patel; A Voskova; C T Caskey
Journal:  Genomics       Date:  1996-08-15       Impact factor: 5.736

4.  Somatic mosaicism, germline expansions, germline reversions and intergenerational reductions in myotonic dystrophy males: small pool PCR analyses.

Authors:  D G Monckton; L J Wong; T Ashizawa; C T Caskey
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  1995-01       Impact factor: 6.150

5.  Heterogeneity of DM kinase repeat expansion in different fetal tissues and further expansion during cell proliferation in vitro: evidence for a casual involvement of methyl-directed DNA mismatch repair in triplet repeat stability.

Authors:  D Wöhrle; I Kennerknecht; M Wolf; H Enders; S Schwemmle; P Steinbach
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  1995-07       Impact factor: 6.150

6.  Somatic heterogeneity of the CTG repeat in myotonic dystrophy is age and size dependent.

Authors:  L J Wong; T Ashizawa; D G Monckton; C T Caskey; C S Richards
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1995-01       Impact factor: 11.025

7.  Analysis of the CTG repeat in skeletal muscle of young and adult myotonic dystrophy patients: when does the expansion occur?

Authors:  M Zatz; M R Passos-Bueno; A Cerqueira; S K Marie; M Vainzof; R C Pavanello
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  1995-03       Impact factor: 6.150

8.  Somatic stability in chorionic villi samples and other Huntington fetal tissues.

Authors:  J Benitez; M Robledo; C Ramos; C Ayuso; R Astarloa; J Garcia Yébenes; B Brambati
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  1995-08       Impact factor: 4.132

9.  CTG repeat analysis in lymphocytes, muscles and fibroblasts in patients with myotonic dystrophy.

Authors:  B Peterlin; N Logar; J Zidar
Journal:  Pflugers Arch       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 3.657

10.  High resolution genetic analysis suggests one ancestral predisposing haplotype for the origin of the myotonic dystrophy mutation.

Authors:  C E Neville; M S Mahadevan; J M Barceló; R G Korneluk
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  1994-01       Impact factor: 6.150

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  39 in total

1.  Chemically induced increases and decreases in the rate of expansion of a CAG*CTG triplet repeat.

Authors:  Mário Gomes-Pereira; Darren G Monckton
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2004-05-20       Impact factor: 16.971

2.  Bidirectional transcription stimulates expansion and contraction of expanded (CTG)*(CAG) repeats.

Authors:  Masayuki Nakamori; Christopher E Pearson; Charles A Thornton
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2010-11-18       Impact factor: 6.150

3.  New insights into repeat instability: role of RNA•DNA hybrids.

Authors:  Elizabeth I McIvor; Urszula Polak; Marek Napierala
Journal:  RNA Biol       Date:  2010-09-01       Impact factor: 4.652

Review 4.  Epigenetic changes and non-coding expanded repeats.

Authors:  Masayuki Nakamori; Charles Thornton
Journal:  Neurobiol Dis       Date:  2010-02-18       Impact factor: 5.996

Review 5.  On the sequence-directed nature of human gene mutation: the role of genomic architecture and the local DNA sequence environment in mediating gene mutations underlying human inherited disease.

Authors:  David N Cooper; Albino Bacolla; Claude Férec; Karen M Vasquez; Hildegard Kehrer-Sawatzki; Jian-Min Chen
Journal:  Hum Mutat       Date:  2011-09-02       Impact factor: 4.878

Review 6.  Modifiers of CAG/CTG Repeat Instability: Insights from Mammalian Models.

Authors:  Vanessa C Wheeler; Vincent Dion
Journal:  J Huntingtons Dis       Date:  2021

7.  Chemotherapeutic deletion of CTG repeats in lymphoblast cells from DM1 patients.

Authors:  Vera I Hashem; Malgorzata J Pytlos; Elzbieta A Klysik; Kuniko Tsuji; Mehrdad Khajavi; Merhdad Khajav; Tetsuo Ashizawa; Richard R Sinden
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2004-12-01       Impact factor: 16.971

8.  Replication-dependent instability at (CTG) x (CAG) repeat hairpins in human cells.

Authors:  Guoqi Liu; Xiaomi Chen; John J Bissler; Richard R Sinden; Michael Leffak
Journal:  Nat Chem Biol       Date:  2010-08-01       Impact factor: 15.040

9.  CTG/CAG repeat instability is modulated by the levels of human DNA ligase I and its interaction with proliferating cell nuclear antigen: a distinction between replication and slipped-DNA repair.

Authors:  Arturo López Castel; Alan E Tomkinson; Christopher E Pearson
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2009-07-22       Impact factor: 5.157

10.  Inhibition of DNA synthesis facilitates expansion of low-complexity repeats: is strand slippage stimulated by transient local depletion of specific dNTPs?

Authors:  Andrei Kuzminov
Journal:  Bioessays       Date:  2013-01-15       Impact factor: 4.345

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