| Literature DB >> 27929715 |
Maria Sokolova1, Mikko Turunen1, Oliver Mortusewicz2, Teemu Kivioja1, Patrick Herr2, Anna Vähärautio1, Mikael Björklund1, Minna Taipale3, Thomas Helleday2, Jussi Taipale1,3.
Abstract
To identify cell cycle regulators that enable cancer cells to replicate DNA and divide in an unrestricted manner, we performed a parallel genome-wide RNAi screen in normal and cancer cell lines. In addition to many shared regulators, we found that tumor and normal cells are differentially sensitive to loss of the histone genes transcriptional regulator CASP8AP2. In cancer cells, loss of CASP8AP2 leads to a failure to synthesize sufficient amount of histones in the S-phase of the cell cycle, resulting in slowing of individual replication forks. Despite this, DNA replication fails to arrest, and tumor cells progress in an elongated S-phase that lasts several days, finally resulting in death of most of the affected cells. In contrast, depletion of CASP8AP2 in normal cells triggers a response that arrests viable cells in S-phase. The arrest is dependent on p53, and preceded by accumulation of markers of DNA damage, indicating that nucleosome depletion is sensed in normal cells via a DNA-damage -like response that is defective in tumor cells.Entities:
Keywords: DNA replication; RNA interference; cancer; cell cycle; chromatin; functional genomics; nucleosome assembly; p53
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27929715 PMCID: PMC5283814 DOI: 10.1080/15384101.2016.1261765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Cycle ISSN: 1551-4005 Impact factor: 4.534
Figure 1.Genome-wide RNAi screen comparing normal and tumor cells. (A) Schematic representation of genome-scale RNAi screening in human immortalized (hTERT-RPE1) and cancer (U2OS) cell lines. (B) Hierarchical clustering of cell cycle regulators (z-score for at least one parameter is >5 or <−5) based on their phenotypic scores (for full data, see Supplementary Table S1). Note that known genes required for cell division (e.g., CDK1, KIF11, PLK1) cluster together for both cell lines. (C) S-phase z-scores in hTERT-RPE1 and U2OS cell lines. Most S-phase arrested hits for hTERT-RPE1 are genes involved in DNA replication and S-phase progression (marked black). Transcriptional regulators of histone genes are marked in red.
Figure 2.Regulation of DNA synthesis and expression of histone genes by CASP8AP2, NPAT and HINFP. (A) Flow cytometric analysis of DNA content (x-axis) and DNA replication (EdU incorporation; y-axis) shows partial or complete DNA synthesis progression 3 d after knockdown of CASP8AP2, NPAT and HINFP in tumor (U2OS) and normal (hTERT-RPE1) cells. Note that in both cell lines, CASP8AP2 RNAi results in formation of a population of S-phase cells with low EdU incorporation (red arrowheads). (B) Analysis of expression of histone genes following knockdown of the indicated genes in U2OS and hTERT-RPE1 cells. Replication-independent histone genes are marked with an asterisk. (C) Location-analysis of transcriptional regulators at histone gene cluster on chromosome 6p22. Cell lines and antibodies used in ChIP-Seq are indicated on the left, and signal intensity as number of reads is shown in parentheses above each track. Note that CASP8AP2 and NPAT co-bind to transcription start sites of replication-dependent histone genes (indicated in bottom) in this cluster.
Figure 3.Tumor cells continue to progress in S-phase despite low nucleosome levels induced by CASP8AP2 knockdown. (A, B) Flow cytometry analysis of DNA content, DNA replication and histone H3 levels in siRNA treated cells. Note that tumor cells continue to replicate their DNA slowly (A) for multiple days, despite low amount of histone H3 (red arrowheads) (B). (C, D) Flow cytometry analysis of DNA content, DNA replication (EdU staining) and histone H3 levels in siRNA treated hTERT-RPE1 cells. Note that normal cells arrest in S-phase (C), and show decrease in histone H3 levels in early S-phase (red arrowheads) (D).
Figure 4.CASP8AP2 siRNA triggers activation of a p53 dependent S-phase checkpoint in normal but not in tumor cells. (A) Analysis of p53 target gene expression 3 d after knockdown of the indicated transcriptional regulators of histone genes. (B, C) Flow cytometry analysis of CASP8AP2 siRNA treated hTERT-RPE1 (B) and U2OS (C) cells indicates that non-replicated cells arrested in S-phase express a marker for DNA damage signaling (γ-H2AX; low right hand corner). (D, E) hTERT-RPE1 (D) but not U2OS (E) cells with activated DNA damage signaling have activated p53, based on expression of the p53 target-gene p21 (upper right hand corner).