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Role of DNA damage response pathways in preventing carcinogenesis caused by intrinsic replication stress

Defective DNA replication can result in genomic instability, cancer, and developmental defects. To understand the roles of DNA damage response (DDR) genes on carcinogenesis in mutants defective for core DNA replication components, we utilized the Mcm4(Chaos3/Chaos3) (“Chaos3”) mouse model which, by...

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Autores principales: Wallace, Marsha D., Southard, Teresa L., Schimenti, Kerry J., Schimenti, John C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3936004/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23975433
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/onc.2013.339
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author Wallace, Marsha D.
Southard, Teresa L.
Schimenti, Kerry J.
Schimenti, John C.
author_facet Wallace, Marsha D.
Southard, Teresa L.
Schimenti, Kerry J.
Schimenti, John C.
author_sort Wallace, Marsha D.
collection PubMed
description Defective DNA replication can result in genomic instability, cancer, and developmental defects. To understand the roles of DNA damage response (DDR) genes on carcinogenesis in mutants defective for core DNA replication components, we utilized the Mcm4(Chaos3/Chaos3) (“Chaos3”) mouse model which, by virtue of an amino acid alteration in MCM4 that destabilizes the MCM2-7 DNA replicative helicase, has fewer dormant replication origins and an increased number of stalled replication forks. This leads to genomic instability and cancer in most Chaos3 mice. We found that animals doubly mutant for Chaos3 and components of the ATM double strand break response pathway (Atm, p21/Cdkn1a, Chk2/Chek2) had decreased tumor latency and/or increased tumor susceptibility. Tumor latency and susceptibility differed between genetic backgrounds and genders, with females demonstrating an overall greater cancer susceptibility to Atm and p21 deficiency than males. ATM deficiency was semilethal in the Chaos3 background and impaired embryonic fibroblast proliferation, suggesting that ATM drug inhibitors might be useful against tumors with DNA replication defects. Hypomorphism for the 9-1-1 component Hus1 did not affect tumor latency or susceptibility in Chaos3 animals, and tumors in these mice did not exhibit impaired ATR pathway signaling. These and other data indicate that under conditions of systemic replication stress, the ATM pathway is particularly important both for cancer suppression and viability during development.
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spelling pubmed-39360042015-01-10 Role of DNA damage response pathways in preventing carcinogenesis caused by intrinsic replication stress Wallace, Marsha D. Southard, Teresa L. Schimenti, Kerry J. Schimenti, John C. Oncogene Article Defective DNA replication can result in genomic instability, cancer, and developmental defects. To understand the roles of DNA damage response (DDR) genes on carcinogenesis in mutants defective for core DNA replication components, we utilized the Mcm4(Chaos3/Chaos3) (“Chaos3”) mouse model which, by virtue of an amino acid alteration in MCM4 that destabilizes the MCM2-7 DNA replicative helicase, has fewer dormant replication origins and an increased number of stalled replication forks. This leads to genomic instability and cancer in most Chaos3 mice. We found that animals doubly mutant for Chaos3 and components of the ATM double strand break response pathway (Atm, p21/Cdkn1a, Chk2/Chek2) had decreased tumor latency and/or increased tumor susceptibility. Tumor latency and susceptibility differed between genetic backgrounds and genders, with females demonstrating an overall greater cancer susceptibility to Atm and p21 deficiency than males. ATM deficiency was semilethal in the Chaos3 background and impaired embryonic fibroblast proliferation, suggesting that ATM drug inhibitors might be useful against tumors with DNA replication defects. Hypomorphism for the 9-1-1 component Hus1 did not affect tumor latency or susceptibility in Chaos3 animals, and tumors in these mice did not exhibit impaired ATR pathway signaling. These and other data indicate that under conditions of systemic replication stress, the ATM pathway is particularly important both for cancer suppression and viability during development. 2013-08-26 2014-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3936004/ /pubmed/23975433 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/onc.2013.339 Text en Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Wallace, Marsha D.
Southard, Teresa L.
Schimenti, Kerry J.
Schimenti, John C.
Role of DNA damage response pathways in preventing carcinogenesis caused by intrinsic replication stress
title Role of DNA damage response pathways in preventing carcinogenesis caused by intrinsic replication stress
title_full Role of DNA damage response pathways in preventing carcinogenesis caused by intrinsic replication stress
title_fullStr Role of DNA damage response pathways in preventing carcinogenesis caused by intrinsic replication stress
title_full_unstemmed Role of DNA damage response pathways in preventing carcinogenesis caused by intrinsic replication stress
title_short Role of DNA damage response pathways in preventing carcinogenesis caused by intrinsic replication stress
title_sort role of dna damage response pathways in preventing carcinogenesis caused by intrinsic replication stress
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3936004/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23975433
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/onc.2013.339
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