3 research outputs found
Functional analysis of the transcription factors Sp3 and Sp4
Biological processes are largely controlled by the synthesis and the modulation of proteins.
For the synthesis of proteins. two steps are of critical importance. Firstly, the genetic
information for the protein has to be transcribed from the DNA of the gene encoding the
protein to the mRNA intermediate and secondly the mRNA has to be translated into the
amino acid sequence that forms the protein
Impaired hematopoiesis in mice lacking the transcription factor Sp3
As the zinc-finger transcription factor specificity protein 3 (Sp3) has
been implicated in the regulation of many hematopoietic-specific genes, we
analyzed the role of Sp3 in hematopoiesis. At embryonic day 18.5 (E18.5),
Sp3-/- mice exhibit a partial arrest of T-cell development in the thymus
and B-cell numbers are reduced in liver and spleen. However, pre-B-cell
proliferation and differentiation into immunoglobulin M-positive (IgM+) B
cells in vitro are not affected. At E14.5 and E16.5, Sp3-/- mice exhibit a
significant delay in the appearance of definitive erythrocytes in the
blood, paralleled by a defect in the progression of differentiation of
definitive erythroid cells in vitro. Perinatal death of the null mutants
precludes the analysis of adult hematopoiesis in Sp3-/- mice. We therefore
investigated the ability of E12.5 Sp3-/- liver cells to contribute to the
hematopoietic compartment in an in vivo transplantation assay. Sp3-/-
cells were able to repopulate the B- and T-lymphoid compartment, albeit
with reduced efficiency. In contrast, Sp3-/- cells showed no significant
engraftment in the erythroid and myeloid lineages. Thus, the absence of
Sp3 results in cell-autonomous hematopoietic defects, affecting in
particular the erythroid and myeloid cell lineages
REV7 counteracts DNA double-strand break resection and affects PARP inhibition
Error-free repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) is achieved by homologous recombination (HR), and BRCA1 is an important factor for this repair pathway. In the absence of BRCA1-mediated HR, the administration of PARP inhibitors induces synthetic lethality of tumour cells of patients with breast or ovarian cancers. Despite the benefit of this tailored therapy, drug resistance can occur by HR restoration. Genetic reversion of BRCA1-inactivating mutations can be the underlying mechanism of drug resistance, but this does not explain resistance in all cases. In particular, little is known about BRCA1-independent restoration of HR. Here we show that loss of REV7 (also known as MAD2L2) in mouse and human cell lines re-establishes CTIP-dependent end resection of DSBs in BRCA1-deficient cells, leading to HR restoration and PARP inhibitor resistance, which is reversed by ATM kinase inhibition. REV7 is recruited to DSBs in a manner dependent on the H2AX-MDC1-RNF8-RNF168-53BP1 chromatin pathway, and seems to block HR and promote end joining in addition to its regulatory role in DNA damage tolerance. Finally, we establish that REV7 blocks DSB resection to promote non-homologous end-joining during immunoglobulin class switch recombination. Our results reveal an unexpected crucial function of REV7 downstream of 53BP1 in coordinating pathological DSB repair pathway choices in BRCA1-deficient cells