Excessive reactive oxygen species induce transcription-dependent replication stress
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Authors
Andrs, MartinStoy, Henriette
Boleslavska, Barbora
Chappidi, Nagaraja
Kanagaraj, Radhakrishnan
Nascakova, Zuzana
Menon, Shruti
Rao, Satyajeet
Oravetzova, Anna
Dobrovolna, Jana
Surendranath, Kalpana
Lopes, Massimo
Janscak, Pavel
Affiliation
Czech Academy of SciencesUniversity of Zurich
Charles University in Prague
Technische Universität Dresden
University of Westminster
University of Bedfordshire
Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology, Chennai
University of California San Francisco (UCSF)
Issue Date
2023-03-30
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Elevated levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) reduce replication fork velocity by causing dissociation of the TIMELESS-TIPIN complex from the replisome. Here, we show that ROS generated by exposure of human cells to the ribonucleotide reductase inhibitor hydroxyurea (HU) promote replication fork reversal in a manner dependent on active transcription and formation of co-transcriptional RNA:DNA hybrids (R-loops). The frequency of R-loop-dependent fork stalling events is also increased after TIMELESS depletion or a partial inhibition of replicative DNA polymerases by aphidicolin, suggesting that this phenomenon is due to a global replication slowdown. In contrast, replication arrest caused by HU-induced depletion of deoxynucleotides does not induce fork reversal but, if allowed to persist, leads to extensive R-loop-independent DNA breakage during S-phase. Our work reveals a link between oxidative stress and transcription-replication interference that causes genomic alterations recurrently found in human cancer.Citation
Andrs M, Stoy H, Boleslavska B, Chappidi N, Kanagaraj R, Nascakova Z, Menon S, Rao S, Oravetzova A, Dobrovolna J, Surendranath K, Lopes M, Janscak P (2023) 'Excessive reactive oxygen species induce transcription-dependent replication stress', Nature Communications, 14 (1), 1791Publisher
SpringerNatureJournal
Nature CommunicationsPubMed ID
36997515PubMed Central ID
PMC10063555Additional Links
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-37341-yType
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
2041-1723EISSN
2041-1723Sponsors
This work was supported by grants from the Swiss National Science Foundation (310030_184716), the Czech Science Foundation (22-08294 S), the Swiss Cancer League (KFS-5484-02-2022) and Foundation for Research in Science and the Humanities at the University of Zurich. M.L. was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (310030_189206). H.S. was supported by grants from Forschungskredit UZH and Krebsliga Zurich. J.D. was supported by the Czech Science Foundation (21-22593X). R.K. and K.S. were co-investigators on the Children with Cancer (CwC) UK grant [PGTaSFA\100027].ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1038/s41467-023-37341-y
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