ATRX loss induces telomere dysfunction and necessitates induction of alternative lengthening of telomeres during human cell immortalization.

TitleATRX loss induces telomere dysfunction and necessitates induction of alternative lengthening of telomeres during human cell immortalization.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsLi F, Deng Z, Zhang L, Wu C, Jin Y, Hwang I, Vladimirova O, Xu L, Yang L, Lu B, Dheekollu J, Li J-Y, Feng H, Hu J, Vakoc CR, Ying H, Paik J, Lieberman PM, Zheng H
JournalEMBO J
Volume38
Issue19
Paginatione96659
Date Published2019 10 01
ISSN1460-2075
KeywordsCell Line, Co-Repressor Proteins, DNA Repair, Gene Deletion, HEK293 Cells, Humans, Molecular Chaperones, Telomerase, Telomere, Telomere Homeostasis, X-linked Nuclear Protein
Abstract

Loss of the histone H3.3-specific chaperone component ATRX or its partner DAXX frequently occurs in human cancers that employ alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT) for chromosomal end protection, yet the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Here, we report that ATRX/DAXX does not serve as an immediate repressive switch for ALT. Instead, ATRX or DAXX depletion gradually induces telomere DNA replication dysfunction that activates not only homology-directed DNA repair responses but also cell cycle checkpoint control. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that this process is contingent on ATRX/DAXX histone chaperone function, independently of telomere length. Combined ATAC-seq and telomere chromatin immunoprecipitation studies reveal that ATRX loss provokes progressive telomere decondensation that culminates in the inception of persistent telomere replication dysfunction. We further show that endogenous telomerase activity cannot overcome telomere dysfunction induced by ATRX loss, leaving telomere repair-based ALT as the only viable mechanism for telomere maintenance during immortalization. Together, these findings implicate ALT activation as an adaptive response to ATRX/DAXX loss-induced telomere replication dysfunction.

DOI10.15252/embj.201796659
Alternate JournalEMBO J
PubMed ID31454099
PubMed Central IDPMC6769380
Grant ListR01AG 048284 / / National Institute for health (NIH/NIA) / International
15-0338 / AICR_ / Worldwide Cancer Research / United Kingdom
R01CA140652 / / National Institute for Health (NIH/NCI) / International
P30CA10815 / / National Institute for Health (NIH/NCI) / International
/ / Chen & Xiao Anti-Cancer Foundation / International
P30 CA045508 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
P01 CA013106 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
R01 GM045436 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
/ / CSHL/Northwell Institutional Fund / International
/ / Sontag Foundation / International
/ / Sidney Kimmel Foundation / International
81672783 / / National Natural Science Foundation of China / International
P30 CA010815 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
/ / Bradley Zankel Foundation / International
Related Faculty: 
Hongwu Zheng, Ph.D. Ji-Hye Paik, Ph.D.

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