Mutations in the insulator protein Suppressor of Hairy wing induce genome instability.
Shih-Jui HsuEmily C StowJames R SimmonsHeather A WallaceAndrea Mancheno LopezShannon StroudMariano LabradorPublished in: Chromosoma (2020)
Insulator proteins orchestrate the three-dimensional organization of the genome. Insulators function by facilitating communications between regulatory sequences and gene promoters, allowing accurate gene transcription regulation during embryo development and cell differentiation. However, the role of insulator proteins beyond genome organization and transcription regulation remains unclear. Suppressor of Hairy wing [Su(Hw)] is a Drosophila insulator protein that plays an important function in female oogenesis. Here we find that su(Hw) has an unsuspected role in genome stability during cell differentiation. We show that su(Hw) mutant developing egg chambers have poorly formed microtubule organization centers (MTOCs) in the germarium and display mislocalization of the anterior/posterior axis specification factor gurken in later oogenesis stages. Additionally, eggshells from partially rescued su(Hw) mutant female germline exhibit dorsoventral patterning defects. These phenotypes are very similar to phenotypes found in the important class of spindle mutants or in piRNA pathway mutants in Drosophila, in which defects generally result from the failure of germ cells to repair DNA damage. Similarities between mutations in su(Hw) and spindle and piRNA mutants are further supported by an excess of DNA damage in nurse cells, and because Gurken localization defects are partially rescued by mutations in the ATR (mei-41) and Chk1 (grapes) DNA damage response genes. Finally, we also show that su(Hw) mutants produce an elevated number of chromosome breaks in dividing neuroblasts from larval brains. Together, these findings suggest that Su(Hw) is necessary for the maintenance of genome integrity during Drosophila development, in both germline and dividing somatic cells.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- dna damage
- induced apoptosis
- dna damage response
- dna repair
- cell cycle arrest
- copy number
- oxidative stress
- wild type
- transcription factor
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- primary care
- gene expression
- pregnant women
- genome wide identification
- amino acid
- zika virus
- cell fate
- genome wide analysis