Chromatin determinants impart camptothecin sensitivity.
Fabio PudduIsrael SalgueroMareike HerzogNicola J GeislerVincenzo CostanzoStephen P JacksonPublished in: EMBO reports (2017)
Camptothecin-induced locking of topoisomerase 1 on DNA generates a physical barrier to replication fork progression and creates topological stress. By allowing replisome rotation, absence of the Tof1/Csm3 complex promotes the conversion of impending topological stress to DNA catenation and causes camptothecin hypersensitivity. Through synthetic viability screening, we discovered that histone H4 K16 deacetylation drives the sensitivity of yeast cells to camptothecin and that inactivation of this pathway by mutating H4 K16 or the genes SIR1-4 suppresses much of the hypersensitivity of tof1∆ strains towards this agent. We show that disruption of rDNA or telomeric silencing does not mediate camptothecin resistance but that disruption of Sir1-dependent chromatin domains is sufficient to suppress camptothecin sensitivity in wild-type and tof1∆ cells. We suggest that topoisomerase 1 inhibition in proximity of these domains causes topological stress that leads to DNA hypercatenation, especially in the absence of the Tof1/Csm3 complex. Finally, we provide evidence of the evolutionarily conservation of this mechanism.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- ms ms
- induced apoptosis
- circulating tumor
- cell free
- cell cycle arrest
- single molecule
- wild type
- genome wide
- drug induced
- gene expression
- dna damage
- transcription factor
- signaling pathway
- escherichia coli
- physical activity
- dna methylation
- nucleic acid
- cell death
- circulating tumor cells
- saccharomyces cerevisiae