| Literature DB >> 35858625 |
Katherine L Palmerola1, Selma Amrane1, Alejandro De Los Angeles2, Shuangyi Xu3, Ning Wang2, Joao de Pinho1, Michael V Zuccaro2, Angelo Taglialatela4, Dashiell J Massey5, Jenna Turocy1, Alex Robles1, Anisa Subbiah1, Bob Prosser1, Rogerio Lobo1, Alberto Ciccia4, Amnon Koren5, Timour Baslan6, Dieter Egli7.
Abstract
Human cleavage-stage embryos frequently acquire chromosomal aneuploidies during mitosis due to unknown mechanisms. Here, we show that S phase at the 1-cell stage shows replication fork stalling, low fork speed, and DNA synthesis extending into G2 phase. DNA damage foci consistent with collapsed replication forks, DSBs, and incomplete replication form in G2 in an ATR- and MRE11-dependent manner, followed by spontaneous chromosome breakage and segmental aneuploidies. Entry into mitosis with incomplete replication results in chromosome breakage, whole and segmental chromosome errors, micronucleation, chromosome fragmentation, and poor embryo quality. Sites of spontaneous chromosome breakage are concordant with sites of DNA synthesis in G2 phase, locating to gene-poor regions with long neural genes, which are transcriptionally silent at this stage of development. Thus, DNA replication stress in mammalian preimplantation embryos predisposes gene-poor regions to fragility, and in particular in the human embryo, to the formation of aneuploidies, impairing developmental potential.Entities:
Keywords: chromosomal mosaicism; chromosome fragility; developmental arrest; double-strand break; gene-poor regions; incomplete replication; micronuclei; preimplantation development; replication stress; stalled replication forks
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35858625 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2022.06.028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 66.850