Literature DB >> 19542097

Loss of Bloom syndrome protein destabilizes human gene cluster architecture.

Michael W Killen1, Dawn M Stults, Noritaka Adachi, Les Hanakahi, Andrew J Pierce.   

Abstract

Bloom syndrome confers strong predisposition to malignancy in multiple tissue types. The Bloom syndrome patient (BLM) protein defective in the disease biochemically functions as a Holliday junction dissolvase and human cells lacking functional BLM show 10-fold elevated rates of sister chromatid exchange. Collectively, these phenomena suggest that dysregulated mitotic recombination drives the genomic instability underpinning the development of cancer in these individuals. Here we use physical analysis of the highly repeated, highly self-similar human ribosomal RNA gene clusters as sentinel biomarkers for dysregulated homologous recombination to demonstrate that loss of BLM protein function causes a striking increase in spontaneous molecular level genomic restructuring. Analysis of single-cell derived sub-clonal populations from wild-type human cell lines shows that gene cluster architecture is ordinarily very faithfully preserved under mitosis, but is so unstable in cell lines derived from BLMs as to make gene cluster architecture in different sub-clonal populations essentially unrecognizable one from another. Human cells defective in a different RecQ helicase, the WRN protein involved in the premature aging Werner syndrome, do not exhibit the gene cluster instability (GCI) phenotype, indicating that the BLM protein specifically, rather than RecQ helicases generally, holds back this recombination-mediated genomic instability. An ataxia-telangiectasia defective cell line also shows elevated rDNA GCI, although not to the extent of BLM defective cells. Genomic restructuring mediated by dysregulated recombination between the abundant low-copy repeats in the human genome may prove to be an important additional mechanism of genomic instability driving the initiation and progression of human cancer.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19542097     DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddp282

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Mol Genet        ISSN: 0964-6906            Impact factor:   6.150


  42 in total

1.  BLM helicase facilitates RNA polymerase I-mediated ribosomal RNA transcription.

Authors:  Patrick M Grierson; Kate Lillard; Gregory K Behbehani; Kelly A Combs; Saumitri Bhattacharyya; Samir Acharya; Joanna Groden
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2011-11-21       Impact factor: 6.150

2.  Neurodegeneration-associated instability of ribosomal DNA.

Authors:  Justin Hallgren; Maciej Pietrzak; Grzegorz Rempala; Peter T Nelson; Michal Hetman
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2014-01-02

Review 3.  Noisy silence: non-coding RNA and heterochromatin formation at repetitive elements.

Authors:  Holger Bierhoff; Anna Postepska-Igielska; Ingrid Grummt
Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2013-10-11       Impact factor: 4.528

4.  Guanine repeat-containing sequences confer transcription-dependent instability in an orientation-specific manner in yeast.

Authors:  Nayun Kim; Sue Jinks-Robertson
Journal:  DNA Repair (Amst)       Date:  2011-08-02

5.  The Werner and Bloom syndrome proteins help resolve replication blockage by converting (regressed) holliday junctions to functional replication forks.

Authors:  Amrita Machwe; Rajashree Karale; Xioahua Xu; Yilun Liu; David K Orren
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2011-07-21       Impact factor: 3.162

Review 6.  Bloom's syndrome: Why not premature aging?: A comparison of the BLM and WRN helicases.

Authors:  Christelle de Renty; Nathan A Ellis
Journal:  Ageing Res Rev       Date:  2016-05-26       Impact factor: 10.895

7.  Efficient Nuclease-Directed Integration of Lentivirus Vectors into the Human Ribosomal DNA Locus.

Authors:  Diana Schenkwein; Saira Afzal; Alisa Nousiainen; Manfred Schmidt; Seppo Ylä-Herttuala
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2020-05-23       Impact factor: 11.454

8.  Configuration and rearrangement of the human GAGE gene clusters.

Authors:  Michael W Killen; Tiffany L Taylor; Dawn M Stults; Weidong Jin; Lisa L Wang; Jeffrey A Moscow; Andrew J Pierce
Journal:  Am J Transl Res       Date:  2011-05-08       Impact factor: 4.060

9.  Human rDNA copy number is unstable in metastatic breast cancers.

Authors:  Virginia Valori; Katalin Tus; Christina Laukaitis; David T Harris; Lauren LeBeau; Keith A Maggert
Journal:  Epigenetics       Date:  2019-08-12       Impact factor: 4.528

10.  The epigenetic regulator SIRT7 guards against mammalian cellular senescence induced by ribosomal DNA instability.

Authors:  Silvana Paredes; Maria Angulo-Ibanez; Luisa Tasselli; Scott M Carlson; Wei Zheng; Tie-Mei Li; Katrin F Chua
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2018-05-04       Impact factor: 5.157

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