HR repair pathway plays a crucial role in maintaining neural stem cell fate under irradiation stress.
Xiao XuHuanping AnCheng WuRong SangLitao WuYuhan LouXiaohang YangYongmei XiPublished in: Life science alliance (2023)
Environmental stress can cause mutation or genomic instability in stem cells which, in some cases, leads to tumorigenesis. Mechanisms to monitor and eliminate these mutant stem cells remain elusive. Here, using the Drosophila larval brain as a model, we show that X-ray irradiation (IR) at the early larval stage leads to accumulation of nuclear Prospero (Pros), resulting in premature differentiation of neural stem cells (neuroblasts, NBs). Through NB-specific RNAi screenings, we determined that it is the Mre11-Rad50-Nbs1 complex and the homologous recombination (HR) repair pathway, rather than non-homologous end-joining pathway that plays, a dominant role in the maintenance of NBs under IR stress. The DNA damage sensor ATR/ mei-41 is shown to act to prevent IR-induced nuclear Pros in a WRNexo-dependent manner. The accumulation of nuclear Pros in NBs under IR stress, leads to NB cell fate termination, rather than resulting in mutant cell proliferation. Our study reveals an emerging mechanism for the HR repair pathway in maintaining neural stem cell fate under irradiation stress.
Keyphrases
- cell fate
- dna damage
- stem cells
- dna repair
- cell proliferation
- neural stem cells
- stress induced
- computed tomography
- heat stress
- risk assessment
- high resolution
- magnetic resonance
- blood brain barrier
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- gene expression
- cell therapy
- endothelial cells
- magnetic resonance imaging
- genome wide
- functional connectivity