| Literature DB >> 31930281 |
Luiza M F Primo1, Leonardo K Teixeira1.
Abstract
Precise replication of genetic material is essential to maintain genome stability. DNA replication is a tightly regulated process that ensues faithful copies of DNA molecules to daughter cells during each cell cycle. Perturbation of DNA replication may compromise the transmission of genetic information, leading to DNA damage, mutations, and chromosomal rearrangements. DNA replication stress, also referred to as DNA replicative stress, is defined as the slowing or stalling of replication fork progression during DNA synthesis as a result of different insults. Oncogene activation, one hallmark of cancer, is able to disturb numerous cellular processes, including DNA replication. In fact, extensive work has indicated that oncogene-induced replication stress is an important source of genomic instability in human carcinogenesis. In this review, we focus on main oncogenes that induce DNA replication stress, such as RAS, MYC, Cyclin E, MDM2, and BCL-2 among others, and the molecular mechanisms by which these oncogenes interfere with normal DNA replication and promote genomic instability.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31930281 PMCID: PMC7197996 DOI: 10.1590/1678-4685GMB-2019-0138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Mol Biol ISSN: 1415-4757 Impact factor: 1.771
Figure 1Molecular mechanisms of DNA replication stress. A) Unusual DNA secondary structures may be formed at certain genomic regions, such as centromeres, telomeres, and fragile sites, and represent natural obstacles to replication fork progression. Stem-loop (left and right) and G-quadruplex (middle) structures are represented. B) Impaired origin licensing may compromise the formation of active replication origins and DNA replication. Normal (left), impaired (middle), and absence of (right) pre-RC formation are represented. C) Disturbed origin firing may interfere with DNA replication and replication fork progression. Normal (right), asymmetric (middle), and repetitive (left) origin firing are represented. D) Uncontrolled S phase entry in the presence of nucleotide pool depletion may impair DNA replication and prevent replication fork progression. E) Collisions between replication and transcription machineries may impair DNA replication fork progression through generation of DNA topological stress and formation of persistent R-loops, RNA-DNA hybrid molecules. A-E) DNA molecule (blue strand), DNA origin of replication (Origin, red strand), ORC complex (green), CDC6 protein (orange), CDT1 protein (purple), MCM complex (yellow), RNA polymerase (blue), and messenger RNA (yellow strand) are represented. DNA polymerases and replisomes are omitted for simplicity. Grey arrows represent progression of replication or transcription machineries and red crosses represent stalled replication forks.
Mechanisms of DNA replication stress induced by different oncogenes.
| Oncogene | Mechanism of replication stress | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| RAS | Increased origin firing |
|
| Impaired fork progression |
| |
| Nucleotide pool depletion |
| |
| Transcription-replication collision |
| |
| MYC | Disturbed origin firing |
|
| Impaired fork progression |
| |
| CCNE1 | Unusual DNA structure |
|
| Decreased origin licensing |
| |
| Disturbed origin firing |
| |
| Impaired fork progression |
| |
| Replication fork reversal |
| |
| Nucleotide pool depletion |
| |
| Transcription-replication collision |
| |
| CDC6 | Increased origin firing |
|
| Transcription-replication collision |
| |
| CDC25 | Increased origin firing |
|
| Replication fork reversal |
| |
| MDM2 | Decreased origin firing |
|
| Impaired fork progression |
| |
| BCL-2 | Nucleotide pool depletion |
|