RECQ-like helicases Sgs1 and BLM regulate R-loop–associated genome instability

Author:

Chang Emily Yun-Chia1,Novoa Carolina A.1,Aristizabal Maria J.2,Coulombe Yan34,Segovia Romulo1,Chaturvedi Richa34ORCID,Shen Yaoqing5,Keong Christelle1,Tam Annie S.16,Jones Steven J.M.56,Masson Jean-Yves34,Kobor Michael S.26,Stirling Peter C.16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Terry Fox Laboratory, British Columbia Cancer Agency, Vancouver, Canada

2. Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics, Vancouver, Canada

3. Genome Stability Laboratory, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Québec Research Center, Québec City, Canada

4. Department of Molecular Biology, Medical Biochemistry and Pathology, Laval University Cancer Research Center, Québec City, Canada

5. Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre, Vancouver, Canada

6. Department of Medical Genetics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

Abstract

Sgs1, the orthologue of human Bloom’s syndrome helicase BLM, is a yeast DNA helicase functioning in DNA replication and repair. We show that SGS1 loss increases R-loop accumulation and sensitizes cells to transcription–replication collisions. Yeast lacking SGS1 accumulate R-loops and γ-H2A at sites of Sgs1 binding, replication pausing regions, and long genes. The mutation signature of sgs1Δ reveals copy number changes flanked by repetitive regions with high R-loop–forming potential. Analysis of BLM in Bloom’s syndrome fibroblasts or by depletion of BLM from human cancer cells confirms a role for Sgs1/BLM in suppressing R-loop–associated genome instability across species. In support of a potential direct effect, BLM is found physically proximal to DNA:RNA hybrids in human cells, and can efficiently unwind R-loops in vitro. Together, our data describe a conserved role for Sgs1/BLM in R-loop suppression and support an increasingly broad view of DNA repair and replication fork stabilizing proteins as modulators of R-loop–mediated genome instability.

Funder

Canadian Cancer Society

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research

Fond de Recherche du Québec - Santé

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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