Base excision repair proteins couple activation-induced cytidine deaminase and endonuclease G during replication stress-induced MLL destabilization.
Boris GoleE MianM RallL WiesmüllerPublished in: Leukemia (2017)
The breakpoint cluster region of the MLL gene (MLLbcr) is frequently rearranged in therapy-related and infant acute leukaemia, but the destabilizing mechanism is poorly understood. We recently proposed that DNA replication stress results in MLLbcr cleavage via endonuclease G (EndoG) and represents the common denominator of genotoxic therapy-induced MLL destabilization. Here we performed a siRNA screen for new factors involved in replication stress-induced MLL rearrangements employing an enhanced green fluorescent protein-based reporter system. We identified 10 factors acting in line with EndoG in MLLbcr breakage or further downstream in the repair of the MLLbcr breaks, including activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID), previously proposed to initiate MLLbcr rearrangements in an RNA transcription-dependent mechanism. Further analysis connected AID and EndoG in MLLbcr destabilization via base excision repair (BER) components. We show that replication stress-induced recruitment of EndoG to the MLLbcr and cleavage are AID/BER dependent. Notably, inhibition of the core BER factor Apurinic-apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 protects against MLLbcr cleavage in tumour and human cord blood-derived haematopoietic stem/progenitor cells, harbouring the cells of origin of leukaemia. We propose that off-target binding of AID to the MLLbcr initiates BER-mediated single-stranded DNA cleavage, which causes derailed EndoG activity ultimately resulting in leukaemogenic MLLbcr rearrangements.
Keyphrases
- stress induced
- acute myeloid leukemia
- cord blood
- high glucose
- dna binding
- drug induced
- diabetic rats
- endothelial cells
- protein protein
- dna repair
- binding protein
- liver failure
- stem cells
- quantum dots
- small molecule
- oxidative stress
- circulating tumor
- transcription factor
- signaling pathway
- cell death
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- drug delivery
- cell proliferation
- amino acid
- hyaluronic acid