Pathogenic CANVAS (AAGGG)n repeats stall DNA replication due to the formation of alternative DNA structures

Author:

Hisey Julia A1,Radchenko Elina A1,Mandel Nicholas H1,McGinty Ryan J2,Matos-Rodrigues Gabriel3,Rastokina Anastasia1,Masnovo Chiara1ORCID,Ceschi Silvia4,Hernandez Alfredo1,Nussenzweig André3,Mirkin Sergei M1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Tufts University , Medford , MA  02155 , USA

2. Department of Biomedical Informatics, Harvard Medical School , Boston , MA 02115, USA

3. Laboratory of Genome Integrity, National Cancer Institute NIH , Bethesda , MD 20892, USA

4. Department of Pharmaceutical and Pharmacological Sciences, University of Padova , Padova  35131 , Italy

Abstract

Abstract CANVAS is a recently characterized repeat expansion disease, most commonly caused by homozygous expansions of an intronic (A2G3)n repeat in the RFC1 gene. There are a multitude of repeat motifs found in the human population at this locus, some of which are pathogenic and others benign. In this study, we conducted structure-functional analyses of the pathogenic (A2G3)n and nonpathogenic (A4G)n repeats. We found that the pathogenic, but not the nonpathogenic, repeat presents a potent, orientation-dependent impediment to DNA polymerization in vitro. The pattern of the polymerization blockage is consistent with triplex or quadruplex formation in the presence of magnesium or potassium ions, respectively. Chemical probing of both repeats in vitro reveals triplex H-DNA formation by only the pathogenic repeat. Consistently, bioinformatic analysis of S1-END-seq data from human cell lines shows preferential H-DNA formation genome-wide by (A2G3)n motifs over (A4G)n motifs. Finally, the pathogenic, but not the nonpathogenic, repeat stalls replication fork progression in yeast and human cells. We hypothesize that the CANVAS-causing (A2G3)n repeat represents a challenge to genome stability by folding into alternative DNA structures that stall DNA replication.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Science Foundation

NIH

NCI

Ellison Medical Foundation Senior Scholar in Aging

Department of Defense

Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation

NIH Intramural FLEX Award

Friedreich's Ataxia Research Alliance

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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