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Delineation of two multi-invasion-induced rearrangement pathways that differently affect genome stability

Punctuated bursts of structural genomic variations (SVs) have been described in various organisms, but their etiology remains incompletely understood. Homologous recombination (HR) is a template-guided mechanism of repair of DNA double-strand breaks and stalled or collapsed replication forks. We rec...

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Autores principales: Reitz, Diedre, Djeghmoum, Yasmina, Watson, Ruth A., Rajput, Pallavi, Argueso, Juan Lucas, Heyer, Wolf-Dietrich, Piazza, Aurèle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10499017/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37541760
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gad.350618.123
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author Reitz, Diedre
Djeghmoum, Yasmina
Watson, Ruth A.
Rajput, Pallavi
Argueso, Juan Lucas
Heyer, Wolf-Dietrich
Piazza, Aurèle
author_facet Reitz, Diedre
Djeghmoum, Yasmina
Watson, Ruth A.
Rajput, Pallavi
Argueso, Juan Lucas
Heyer, Wolf-Dietrich
Piazza, Aurèle
author_sort Reitz, Diedre
collection PubMed
description Punctuated bursts of structural genomic variations (SVs) have been described in various organisms, but their etiology remains incompletely understood. Homologous recombination (HR) is a template-guided mechanism of repair of DNA double-strand breaks and stalled or collapsed replication forks. We recently identified a DNA break amplification and genome rearrangement pathway originating from the endonucleolytic processing of a multi-invasion (MI) DNA joint molecule formed during HR. Genome-wide approaches confirmed that multi-invasion-induced rearrangement (MIR) frequently leads to several repeat-mediated SVs and aneuploidies. Using molecular and genetic analysis and a novel, highly sensitive proximity ligation-based assay for chromosomal rearrangement quantification, we further delineate two MIR subpathways. MIR1 is a universal pathway occurring in any sequence context, which generates secondary breaks and frequently leads to additional SVs. MIR2 occurs only if recombining donors exhibit substantial homology and results in sequence insertion without additional breaks or SVs. The most detrimental MIR1 pathway occurs late on a subset of persisting DNA joint molecules in a PCNA/Polδ-independent manner, unlike recombinational DNA synthesis. This work provides a refined mechanistic understanding of these HR-based SV formation pathways and shows that complex repeat-mediated SVs can occur without displacement DNA synthesis. Sequence signatures for inferring MIR1 from long-read data are proposed.
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spelling pubmed-104990172023-09-14 Delineation of two multi-invasion-induced rearrangement pathways that differently affect genome stability Reitz, Diedre Djeghmoum, Yasmina Watson, Ruth A. Rajput, Pallavi Argueso, Juan Lucas Heyer, Wolf-Dietrich Piazza, Aurèle Genes Dev Research Papers Punctuated bursts of structural genomic variations (SVs) have been described in various organisms, but their etiology remains incompletely understood. Homologous recombination (HR) is a template-guided mechanism of repair of DNA double-strand breaks and stalled or collapsed replication forks. We recently identified a DNA break amplification and genome rearrangement pathway originating from the endonucleolytic processing of a multi-invasion (MI) DNA joint molecule formed during HR. Genome-wide approaches confirmed that multi-invasion-induced rearrangement (MIR) frequently leads to several repeat-mediated SVs and aneuploidies. Using molecular and genetic analysis and a novel, highly sensitive proximity ligation-based assay for chromosomal rearrangement quantification, we further delineate two MIR subpathways. MIR1 is a universal pathway occurring in any sequence context, which generates secondary breaks and frequently leads to additional SVs. MIR2 occurs only if recombining donors exhibit substantial homology and results in sequence insertion without additional breaks or SVs. The most detrimental MIR1 pathway occurs late on a subset of persisting DNA joint molecules in a PCNA/Polδ-independent manner, unlike recombinational DNA synthesis. This work provides a refined mechanistic understanding of these HR-based SV formation pathways and shows that complex repeat-mediated SVs can occur without displacement DNA synthesis. Sequence signatures for inferring MIR1 from long-read data are proposed. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2023-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10499017/ /pubmed/37541760 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gad.350618.123 Text en © 2023 Reitz et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article, published in Genes & Development, is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Papers
Reitz, Diedre
Djeghmoum, Yasmina
Watson, Ruth A.
Rajput, Pallavi
Argueso, Juan Lucas
Heyer, Wolf-Dietrich
Piazza, Aurèle
Delineation of two multi-invasion-induced rearrangement pathways that differently affect genome stability
title Delineation of two multi-invasion-induced rearrangement pathways that differently affect genome stability
title_full Delineation of two multi-invasion-induced rearrangement pathways that differently affect genome stability
title_fullStr Delineation of two multi-invasion-induced rearrangement pathways that differently affect genome stability
title_full_unstemmed Delineation of two multi-invasion-induced rearrangement pathways that differently affect genome stability
title_short Delineation of two multi-invasion-induced rearrangement pathways that differently affect genome stability
title_sort delineation of two multi-invasion-induced rearrangement pathways that differently affect genome stability
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10499017/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37541760
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gad.350618.123
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