Abstract
SummaryOne of the hallmarks of cancer is the formation of oncogenic fusion genes as a result of chromosomal translocations. Fusion genes are presumed to occur prior to fusion RNA expression. However, studies have reported the presence of fusion RNAs in individuals who were negative for chromosomal translocations. These observations give rise to “the cart before the horse” hypothesis, in which fusion RNA precedes the fusion gene and guides the genomic rearrangements that ultimately result in gene fusions. Yet RNA-mediated genomic rearrangement in mammalian cells has never been demonstrated. Here we provide evidence that expression of a chimeric RNA drives formation of a specified gene fusion via genomic rearrangement in mammalian cells. The process is (1) specified by the sequence of chimeric RNA involved, (2) facilitated by physiological hormone levels, (3) permissible regardless of intra-chromosomal (TMPRSS2-ERG) or inter-chromosomal (TMPRSS2-ETV1) fusion, and (4) can occur in normal cells prior to malignant transformation. We demonstrate that, contrary to “the cart before the horse” model, it is the antisense rather than sense chimeric RNAs that effectively drive gene fusion, and that this disparity can be explained by transcriptional conflict. Furthermore, we identified an endogenous RNA AZI1 that acts as the ‘initiator’ RNA to induce TMPRSS2-ERG fusion. RNA-driven gene fusion demonstrated in this report provides important insight in early disease mechanism, and could have fundamental implications in the biology of mammalian genome stability, as well as gene editing technology via mechanisms native to mammalian cells.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory