Parp3 promotes long-range end joining in murine cells

Author:

Layer Jacob V.,Cleary J. Patrick,Brown Alexander J.,Stevenson Kristen E.,Morrow Sara N.,Van Scoyk Alexandria,Blasco Rafael B.,Karaca Elif,Meng Fei-Long,Frock Richard L.ORCID,Tivey Trevor,Kim Sunhee,Fuchs Hailey,Chiarle Roberto,Alt Frederick W.,Roberts Steven A.,Weinstock David M.,Day Tovah A.

Abstract

Chromosomal rearrangements, including translocations, are early and essential events in the formation of many tumors. Previous studies that defined the genetic requirements for rearrangement formation have identified differences between murine and human cells, most notably in the role of classic and alternative nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) factors. We reported that poly(ADP)ribose polymerase 3 (PARP3) promotes chromosomal rearrangements induced by endonucleases in multiple human cell types. We show here that in contrast to classic (c-NHEJ) factors, Parp3 also promotes rearrangements in murine cells, including translocations in murine embryonic stem cells (mESCs), class–switch recombination in primary B cells, and inversions in tail fibroblasts that generateEml4Alkfusions. In mESCs, Parp3-deficient cells had shorter deletion lengths at translocation junctions. This was corroborated using next-generation sequencing ofEml4Alkjunctions in tail fibroblasts and is consistent with a role for Parp3 in promoting the processing of DNA double-strand breaks. We confirmed a previous report that Parp1 also promotes rearrangement formation. In contrast with Parp3, rearrangement junctions in the absence of Parp1 had longer deletion lengths, suggesting that Parp1 may suppress double-strand break processing. Together, these data indicate that Parp3 and Parp1 promote rearrangements with distinct phenotypes.

Funder

American Cancer Society

Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation for Childhood Cancer

Claudia Adams Barr Fund for Basic Cancer Research

HHS | NIH | National Cancer Institute

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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