Sustained inactivation of the Polycomb PRC1 complex induces DNA repair defects and genomic instability in epigenetic tumors

Author:

Rawal Chetan C.,Loubiere Vincent,Butova Nadejda L.,Gracia Juliette,Parreno Victoria,Merigliano Chiara,Martinez Anne-Marie,Cavalli Giacomo,Chiolo Irene

Abstract

AbstractCancer initiation and progression are typically associated with the accumulation of driver mutations and genomic instability. However, recent studies demonstrated that cancer can also be driven purely by epigenetic alterations, without driver mutations. Specifically, a 24-h transient downregulation of polyhomeotic (ph-KD), a core component of the Polycomb complex PRC1, is sufficient to induce epigenetically initiated cancers (EICs) in Drosophila, which are proficient in DNA repair and characterized by a stable genome. Whether genomic instability eventually occurs when PRC1 downregulation is performed for extended periods of time remains unclear. Here, we show that prolonged depletion of PH, which mimics cancer initiating events, results in broad dysregulation of DNA replication and repair genes, along with the accumulation of DNA breaks, defective repair, and widespread genomic instability in the cancer tissue. A broad misregulation of H2AK118 ubiquitylation and to a lesser extent of H3K27 trimethylation also occurs and might contribute to these phenotypes. Together, this study supports a model where DNA repair and replication defects accumulate during the tumorigenic transformation epigenetically induced by PRC1 loss, resulting in genomic instability and cancer progression.

Funder

European Research Council

European Union

Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale

MSDAVENIR foundation

Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale

Institut National Du Cancer

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Science Foundation-Career

University of Southern California

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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1. Seeing genomes;Histochemistry and Cell Biology;2024-06-08

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