Literature DB >> 35018465

Stimulation of adaptive gene amplification by origin firing under replication fork constraint.

Alex J Whale1, Michelle King1, Ryan M Hull1, Felix Krueger2, Jonathan Houseley1.   

Abstract

Adaptive mutations can cause drug resistance in cancers and pathogens, and increase the tolerance of agricultural pests and diseases to chemical treatment. When and how adaptive mutations form is often hard to discern, but we have shown that adaptive copy number amplification of the copper resistance gene CUP1 occurs in response to environmental copper due to CUP1 transcriptional activation. Here we dissect the mechanism by which CUP1 transcription in budding yeast stimulates copy number variation (CNV). We show that transcriptionally stimulated CNV requires TREX-2 and Mediator, such that cells lacking TREX-2 or Mediator respond normally to copper but cannot acquire increased resistance. Mediator and TREX-2 can cause replication stress by tethering transcribed loci to nuclear pores, a process known as gene gating, and transcription at the CUP1 locus causes a TREX-2-dependent accumulation of replication forks indicative of replication fork stalling. TREX-2-dependent CUP1 gene amplification occurs by a Rad52 and Rad51-mediated homologous recombination mechanism that is enhanced by histone H3K56 acetylation and repressed by Pol32 and Pif1. CUP1 amplification is also critically dependent on late-firing replication origins present in the CUP1 repeats, and mutations that remove or inactivate these origins strongly suppress the acquisition of copper resistance. We propose that replicative stress imposed by nuclear pore association causes replication bubbles from these origins to collapse soon after activation, leaving a tract of H3K56-acetylated chromatin that promotes secondary recombination events during elongation after replication fork re-start events. The capacity for inefficient replication origins to promote copy number variation renders certain genomic regions more fragile than others, and therefore more likely to undergo adaptive evolution through de novo gene amplification.
© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35018465      PMCID: PMC8789084          DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab1257

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res        ISSN: 0305-1048            Impact factor:   16.971


  122 in total

1.  Mrc1 is a replication fork component whose phosphorylation in response to DNA replication stress activates Rad53.

Authors:  Alexander J Osborn; Stephen J Elledge
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2003-07-15       Impact factor: 11.361

2.  Two alternative pathways of double-strand break repair that are kinetically separable and independently modulated.

Authors:  J Fishman-Lobell; N Rudin; J E Haber
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  1992-03       Impact factor: 4.272

Review 3.  Preventing replication stress to maintain genome stability: resolving conflicts between replication and transcription.

Authors:  Rodrigo Bermejo; Mong Sing Lai; Marco Foiani
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2012-03-30       Impact factor: 17.970

4.  A role for cell-cycle-regulated histone H3 lysine 56 acetylation in the DNA damage response.

Authors:  Hiroshi Masumoto; David Hawke; Ryuji Kobayashi; Alain Verreault
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2005-07-14       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  Copper and manganese induce yeast apoptosis via different pathways.

Authors:  Qiuli Liang; Bing Zhou
Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2007-09-19       Impact factor: 4.138

6.  Amplification of the CUP1 gene is associated with evolution of copper tolerance in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  Giusy M Adamo; Marina Lotti; Markus J Tamás; Stefania Brocca
Journal:  Microbiology (Reading)       Date:  2012-07-12       Impact factor: 2.777

7.  Hyper-Acetylation of Histone H3K56 Limits Break-Induced Replication by Inhibiting Extensive Repair Synthesis.

Authors:  Jun Che; Stephanie Smith; Yoo Jung Kim; Eun Yong Shim; Kyungjae Myung; Sang Eun Lee
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2015-02-23       Impact factor: 5.917

Review 8.  Twenty years of Mediator complex structural studies.

Authors:  Alexis Verger; Didier Monté; Vincent Villeret
Journal:  Biochem Soc Trans       Date:  2019-02-07       Impact factor: 5.407

9.  Homologous recombination and Mus81 promote replication completion in response to replication fork blockage.

Authors:  Benjamin Pardo; María Moriel-Carretero; Thibaud Vicat; Andrés Aguilera; Philippe Pasero
Journal:  EMBO Rep       Date:  2020-05-17       Impact factor: 8.807

10.  Stress-induced mutation via DNA breaks in Escherichia coli: a molecular mechanism with implications for evolution and medicine.

Authors:  Susan M Rosenberg; Chandan Shee; Ryan L Frisch; P J Hastings
Journal:  Bioessays       Date:  2012-08-22       Impact factor: 4.345

View more
  2 in total

1.  Neural networks enable efficient and accurate simulation-based inference of evolutionary parameters from adaptation dynamics.

Authors:  Grace Avecilla; Julie N Chuong; Fangfei Li; Gavin Sherlock; David Gresham; Yoav Ram
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2022-05-27       Impact factor: 9.593

2.  Nuclear Lipid Droplet Birth during Replicative Stress.

Authors:  Sylvain Kumanski; Romain Forey; Chantal Cazevieille; María Moriel-Carretero
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2022-04-20       Impact factor: 7.666

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.