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Data from Disabling the Fanconi Anemia Pathway in Stem Cells Leads to Radioresistance and Genomic Instability

Posted on 2023-03-31 - 04:23
Abstract

Fanconi anemia is an inherited genome instability syndrome characterized by interstrand cross-link hypersensitivity, congenital defects, bone marrow failure, and cancer predisposition. Although DNA repair mediated by Fanconi anemia genes has been extensively studied, how inactivation of these genes leads to specific cellular phenotypic consequences associated with Fanconi anemia is not well understood. Here we report that Fanconi anemia stem cells in the C. elegans germline and in murine embryos display marked nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ)–dependent radiation resistance, leading to survival of progeny cells carrying genetic lesions. In contrast, DNA cross-linking does not induce generational genomic instability in Fanconi anemia stem cells, as widely accepted, but rather drives NHEJ-dependent apoptosis in both species. These findings suggest that Fanconi anemia is a stem cell disease reflecting inappropriate NHEJ, which is mutagenic and carcinogenic as a result of DNA misrepair, while marrow failure represents hematopoietic stem cell apoptosis.

Significance:

This study finds that Fanconi anemia stem cells preferentially activate error-prone NHEJ-dependent DNA repair to survive irradiation, thereby conferring generational genomic instability that is instrumental in carcinogenesis.

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FUNDING

NIH

NCI Cancer Center Support Core Grant

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Cancer Research

AUTHORS (10)

  • Xinzhu Deng
    Jason Tchieu
    Daniel S. Higginson
    Kuo-Shun Hsu
    Regina Feldman
    Lorenz Studer
    Shai Shaham
    Simon N. Powell
    Zvi Fuks
    Richard Kolesnick
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