Publication: Repeat expansions confer WRN dependence in microsatellite-unstable cancers
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Date
2020-09-30
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Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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van Wietmarschen, Niek, Sriram Sridharan, William J. Nathan, Anthony Tubbs, Edmond Chan, Elsa Callen, Wei Wu et al. "Repeat expansions confer WRN dependence in microsatellite-unstable cancers." Nature 586, no. 7828 (2020): 292-298. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2769-8
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Abstract
The RecQ DNA helicase WRN is a synthetic lethal target for cancer cells with microsatellite instability (MSI), a form of genetic hypermutability that arises from impaired mismatch repair. Depletion of WRN induces widespread DNA double-strand breaks in MSI cells, leading to cell cycle arrest and/or apoptosis. However, the mechanism by which WRN protects MSI-associated cancers from double-strand breaks remains unclear. Here we show that TA-dinucleotide repeats are highly unstable in MSI cells and undergo large-scale expansions, distinct from previously described insertion or deletion mutations of a few nucleotides. Expanded TA repeats form non-B DNA secondary structures that stall replication forks, activate the ATR checkpoint kinase, and require unwinding by the WRN helicase. In the absence of WRN, the expanded TA-dinucleotide repeats are susceptible to cleavage by the MUS81 nuclease, leading to massive chromosome shattering. These findings identify a distinct biomarker that underlies the synthetic lethal dependence on WRN, and support the development of therapeutic agents that target WRN for MSI-associated cancers.
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