40 research outputs found
Genome-wide mapping of embedded ribonucleotides and other noncanonical nucleotides using emRiboSeq and EndoSeq
Ribonucleotides are the most common non-canonical nucleotides incorporated into the genome of replicating cells. They are efficiently removed by ribonucleotide excision repair initiated by Ribonuclease (RNase) H2 cleavage. In the absence of RNase H2, such embedded ribonucleotides can be used to track DNA polymerase activity in vivo. To determine their precise location in Saccharomyces cerevisiae we developed embedded Ribonucleotide Sequencing (emRiboSeq), which uses recombinant RNase H2 to selectively create ligatable 3’-hydroxyl groups, in contrast to alternative methods that utilize alkaline hydrolysis. EmRiboSeq allows reproducible, strand-specific and potentially quantitative detection of embedded ribonucleotides at single-nucleotide resolution. This protocol can be adapted for the genome-wide mapping of other non-canonical bases by replacing RNase H2 with specific nicking endonucleases, a method we term Endonuclease Sequencing (EndoSeq). With the protocol taking <5 days to complete, these methods allow the in vivo study of DNA replication and repair, including the identification of replication origins and termination regions
Signatures of TOP1 transcription-associated mutagenesis in cancer and germline
The mutational landscape is shaped by many processes. Genic regions are vulnerable to mutation but are preferentially protected by transcription-coupled repair1. In microorganisms, transcription has been demonstrated to be mutagenic2,3; however, the impact of transcription-associated mutagenesis remains to be established in higher eukaryotes4. Here we show that ID4—a cancer insertion–deletion (indel) mutation signature of unknown aetiology5 characterized by short (2 to 5 base pair) deletions —is due to a transcription-associated mutagenesis process. We demonstrate that defective ribonucleotide excision repair in mammals is associated with the ID4 signature, with mutations occurring at a TNT sequence motif, implicating topoisomerase 1 (TOP1) activity at sites of genome-embedded ribonucleotides as a mechanistic basis. Such TOP1-mediated deletions occur somatically in cancer, and the ID-TOP1 signature is also found in physiological settings, contributing to genic de novo indel mutations in the germline. Thus, although topoisomerases protect against genome instability by relieving topological stress6, their activity may also be an important source of mutations in the human genome.We thank S. Jinks-Robertson for suggesting the traffic light reporter approach; H. Klein for guidance on fluctuation assays; R. van Boxtel for sharing sequencing data for MLH1-KO organoids; A. Bretherick, O. B. Reina and G. Kudla for advice on HygroR re-coding; staff at the IGC core services (L. Murphy, C. Nicol, C. Warnock, E. Freyer, S. Brown and J. Joseph), C. Logan, A. Fluteau, A. Robertson and the staff at Edinburgh Genomics for technical assistance; staff at Liverpool CLL Biobank (funded by Blood Cancer UK) for samples used to generate GEL WGS data; A. Ewing, C.-A. Martin, N. Hastie and W. Bickmore for discussions. Funding for this work: UK Medical Research Council Human Genetics Unit core grants (MC_UU_00007/5 to A.P.J., MC_UU_00007/11 to M.S.T.); Edinburgh Clinical Academic Track PhD programme (Wellcome Trust 204802/Z/16/Z) to T.C.W.; 2021 AACR-Amgen Fellowship in Clinical/Translational Cancer Research (grant number 21-40-11-NADE) to F.N.; a CRUK Brain Tumour Centre of Excellence Award (C157/A27589) to M.D.N.; EKFS research grant (2019_A09), Wilhelm Sander-Stiftung (2019.046.1) to K.A., CRUK programme grant (C20807/A2864) to T.S.; La Caixa Foundation (CLLEvolution-LCF/PR/HR17/52150017, Health Research 2017 Program HR17-00221) to E.C.; E.C. is an Academia Researcher of the Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats of the Generalitat de Catalunya. Edinburgh Genomics is partly supported by NERC (R8/H10/56), MRC (MR/K001744/1) and BBSRC (BB/J004243/1). This research was made possible through access to the data and findings generated by the 100,000 Genomes Project. The 100,000 Genomes Project is managed by Genomics England Limited (a wholly owned company of the Department of Health and Social Care). The 100,000 Genomes Project is funded by the National Institute for Health Research and NHS England. The Wellcome Trust, Cancer Research UK and the Medical Research Council have also funded research infrastructure. The 100,000 Genomes Project uses data provided by patients and collected by the National Health Service as part of their care and support.Peer Reviewed"Article signat per 22 autors/es: Martin A. M. Reijns, David A. Parry, Thomas C. Williams, Ferran Nadeu, Rebecca L. Hindshaw, Diana O. Rios Szwed, Michael D. Nicholson, Paula Carroll, Shelagh Boyle, Romina Royo, Alex J. Cornish, Hang Xiang, Kate Ridout, The Genomics England Research Consortium, Colorectal Cancer Domain UK 100,000 Genomes Project, Anna Schuh, Konrad Aden, Claire Palles, Elias Campo, Tatjana Stankovic, Martin S. Taylor & Andrew P. Jackson "Postprint (published version
RNase H2, mutated in Aicardi-Goutières syndrome, promotes LINE-1 retrotransposition
Long INterspersed Element class 1 (LINE-1) elements are a type of
abundant retrotransposons active in mammalian genomes. An
average human genome contains ~100 retrotransposition-competent
LINE-1s, whose activity is influenced by the combined action
of cellular repressors and activators. TREX1, SAMHD1 and ADAR1
are known LINE-1 repressors and when mutated cause the autoinflammatory
disorder Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS). Mutations
in RNase H2 are the most common cause of AGS, and its activity
was proposed to similarly control LINE-1 retrotransposition. It has
therefore been suggested that increased LINE-1 activity may be
the cause of aberrant innate immune activation in AGS. Here, we
establish that, contrary to expectations, RNase H2 is required for
efficient LINE-1 retrotransposition. As RNase H1 overexpression
partially rescues the defect in RNase H2 null cells, we propose a
model in which RNase H2 degrades the LINE-1 RNA after reverse
transcription, allowing retrotransposition to be completed. This
also explains how LINE-1 elements can retrotranspose efficiently
without their own RNase H activity. Our findings appear to be at
odds with LINE-1-derived nucleic acids driving autoinflammation
in AGS.M.B.-G. is funded by a “Formacion Profesorado
Universitario” (FPU) PhD fellowship from the Government of Spain (MINECO,
Ref FPU15/03294), and this paper is part of her thesis project (“Epigenetic
control of the mobility of a human retrotransposon”). R.V.-A. is funded by a
PFIS Fellowship from the Government of Spain (ISCiii, FI16/00413). O.M. is
funded by an EMBO Long-Term Fellowship (ALTF 7-2015), the European
Commission FP7 (Marie Curie Actions, LTFCOFUND2013, GA-2013-609409) and
the Swiss National Science Foundation (P2ZHP3_158709). S.R.H. is funded by
the Government of Spain (MINECO, RYC-2016-21395 and SAF2015-71589-P).
A.P.J’s laboratory is supported by the UK Medical Research Council (MRC University Unit grant U127527202). J.L.G.P’s laboratory is supported by CICEFEDER-
P12-CTS-2256, Plan Nacional de I+D+I 2008-2011 and 2013-2016 (FISFEDER-
PI14/02152), PCIN-2014-115-ERA-NET NEURON II, the European
Research Council (ERC-Consolidator ERC-STG-2012-233764), by an International
Early Career Scientist grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute
(IECS-55007420), by The Wellcome Trust-University of Edinburgh Institutional
Strategic Support Fund (ISFF2) and by a private donation from Ms Francisca
Serrano (Trading y Bolsa para Torpes, Granada, Spain)
The Lsm2-8 complex determines nuclear localization of the spliceosomal U6 snRNA
Lsm proteins are ubiquitous, multifunctional proteins that are involved in the processing and/or turnover of many, if not all, RNAs in eukaryotes. They generally interact only transiently with their substrate RNAs, in keeping with their likely roles as RNA chaperones. The spliceosomal U6 snRNA is an exception, being stably associated with the Lsm2-8 complex. The U6 snRNA is generally considered to be intrinsically nuclear but the mechanism of its nuclear retention has not been demonstrated, although La protein has been implicated. We show here that the complete Lsm2-8 complex is required for nuclear accumulation of U6 snRNA in yeast. Therefore, just as Sm proteins effect nuclear localization of the other spliceosomal snRNPs, the Lsm proteins mediate U6 snRNP localization except that nuclear retention is the likely mechanism for the U6 snRNP. La protein, which binds only transiently to the nascent U6 transcript, has a smaller, apparently indirect, effect on U6 localization that is compatible with its proposed role as a chaperone in facilitating U6 snRNP assembly
DNA damage contributes to neurotoxic inflammation in Aicardi-Goutières Syndrome astrocytes
Aberrant induction of type I IFN is a hallmark of the inherited encephalopathy Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS), but the mechanisms triggering disease in the human central nervous system (CNS) remain elusive. Here, we generated human models of AGS using genetically modified and patient-derived pluripotent stem cells harboring TREX1 or RNASEH2B loss-of-function alleles. Genome-wide transcriptomic analysis reveals that spontaneous proinflammatory activation in AGS astrocytes initiates signaling cascades impacting multiple CNS cell subsets analyzed at the single-cell level. We identify accumulating DNA damage, with elevated R-loop and micronuclei formation, as a driver of STING- and NLRP3-related inflammatory responses leading to the secretion of neurotoxic mediators. Importantly, pharmacological inhibition of proapoptotic or inflammatory cascades in AGS astrocytes prevents neurotoxicity without apparent impact on their increased type I IFN responses. Together, our work identifies DNA damage as a major driver of neurotoxic inflammation in AGS astrocytes, suggests a role for AGS gene products in R-loop homeostasis, and identifies common denominators of disease that can be targeted to prevent astrocyte-mediated neurotoxicity in AGS
TRAIP promotes DNA damage response during genome replication and is mutated in primordial dwarfism.
DNA lesions encountered by replicative polymerases threaten genome stability and cell cycle progression. Here we report the identification of mutations in TRAIP, encoding an E3 RING ubiquitin ligase, in patients with microcephalic primordial dwarfism. We establish that TRAIP relocalizes to sites of DNA damage, where it is required for optimal phosphorylation of H2AX and RPA2 during S-phase in response to ultraviolet (UV) irradiation, as well as fork progression through UV-induced DNA lesions. TRAIP is necessary for efficient cell cycle progression and mutations in TRAIP therefore limit cellular proliferation, providing a potential mechanism for microcephaly and dwarfism phenotypes. Human genetics thus identifies TRAIP as a component of the DNA damage response to replication-blocking DNA lesions.This work was supported by funding from the Medical Research Council and the European Research Council (ERC, 281847) (A.P.J.), the Lister Institute for Preventative Medicine (A.P.J. and G.S.S.), Medical Research Scotland (L.S.B.), German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF, 01GM1404) and E-RARE network EuroMicro (B.W), Wellcome Trust (M. Hurles), CMMC (P.N.), Cancer Research UK (C17183/A13030) (G.S.S. and M.R.H), Swiss National Science Foundation (P2ZHP3_158709) (O.M.), AIRC (12710) and ERC/EU FP7 (CIG_303806) (S.S.), Cancer Research UK (C6/A11224) and ERC/EU FP7 (HEALTH-F2- 2010-259893) (A.N.B. and S.P.J.).This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from NPG via http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng.345