Inherited C-terminal TREX1 variants disrupt homology-directed repair to cause senescence and DNA damage phenotypes in Drosophila, mice, and humans.
Samuel D ChauvinShoichiro AndoJoe A HolleyAtsushi SugieFang R ZhaoSubhajit PoddarRei KatoCathrine A MinerYohei NittaSiddharth R KrishnamurthyRie SaitoYue NingYuya HatanoSho KitaharaShin KoideW Alexander StinsonJiayuan FuNehalee SurveLindsay KumbleWei QianOleksiy PolishchukPrabhakar S AndheyCindy ChiangGuan Qun LiuLudovic ColombeauRaphaël RodriguezNicolas ManelAkiyoshi KakitaMaxim N ArtyomovDavid C. SchultzP Toby CoatesElisha D O RobersonYasmine BelkaidRoger A GreenbergSara CherryMichaela U GackTristan HardyOsamu OnoderaTaisuke KatoJonathan J MinerPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Age-related microangiopathy, also known as small vessel disease (SVD), causes damage to the brain, retina, liver, and kidney. Based on the DNA damage theory of aging, we reasoned that genomic instability may underlie an SVD caused by dominant C-terminal variants in TREX1, the most abundant 3'-5' DNA exonuclease in mammals. C-terminal TREX1 variants cause an adult-onset SVD known as retinal vasculopathy with cerebral leukoencephalopathy (RVCL or RVCL-S). In RVCL, an aberrant, C-terminally truncated TREX1 mislocalizes to the nucleus due to deletion of its ER-anchoring domain. Since RVCL pathology mimics that of radiation injury, we reasoned that nuclear TREX1 would cause DNA damage. Here, we show that RVCL-associated TREX1 variants trigger DNA damage in humans, mice, and Drosophila, and that cells expressing RVCL mutant TREX1 are more vulnerable to DNA damage induced by chemotherapy and cytokines that up-regulate TREX1, leading to depletion of TREX1-high cells in RVCL mice. RVCL-associated TREX1 mutants inhibit homology-directed repair (HDR), causing DNA deletions and vulnerablility to PARP inhibitors. In women with RVCL, we observe early-onset breast cancer, similar to patients with BRCA1/2 variants. Our results provide a mechanistic basis linking aberrant TREX1 activity to the DNA damage theory of aging, premature senescence, and microvascular disease.
Keyphrases
- dna damage
- dna repair
- oxidative stress
- copy number
- early onset
- induced apoptosis
- wild type
- cell cycle arrest
- diabetic retinopathy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell free
- late onset
- signaling pathway
- cell proliferation
- optical coherence tomography
- radiation therapy
- circulating tumor
- pi k akt
- young adults
- white matter
- adipose tissue
- breast cancer cells
- resting state