DNA-RNA hybrids contribute to the replication dependent genomic instability induced by Omcg1 deficiency Journal Article


Authors: Houlard, M.; Artus, J.; Léguillier, T.; Vandormael-Pournin, S.; Cohen-Tannoudji, M.
Article Title: DNA-RNA hybrids contribute to the replication dependent genomic instability induced by Omcg1 deficiency
Abstract: During S phase, the replisome has to overcome many physical obstacles that can cause replication fork stalling and compromise genome integrity. Transcription is an important source of replicative stress and consequently, maintenance of genome integrity requires the protection of chromosomes from the deleterious effects arising from the interaction between nascent RNAs and template DNA, leading to stable DNA-RNA hybrids (R-loop) formation. We previously reported the essential role of Omcg1 (Ovum Mutant Candidate Gene 1) for cell cycle progression during early embryonic development. Here, we show that OMCG1 is a target of the cell cycle checkpoint kinases ATR/ATM and is essential for S phase progression in mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Using a conditional gene inactivation strategy, we demonstrate that OMCG1 depletion impairs cell viability as a consequence of DSB formation, checkpoint activation and replication fork collapse. We also show that no chromosome breaks were generated in non-cycling Omcg1-deficient cells. Furthermore, increased RNaseH expression significantly alleviated genomic instability in deficient fibroblasts suggesting that cotranscriptional R-loops formation contributes to the genesis of replication-dependent DSBs in these cells. Together, with recent reports describing its participation to complexes involved in cotanscriptional processes, our results suggest that OMCG1 plays a role in the tight coupling between mRNA processing pathways and maintenance of genome integrity during cell cycle progression. © 2011 Landes Bioscience.
Keywords: controlled study; protein expression; gene deletion; nonhuman; animal cell; mouse; cell viability; gene; cell cycle; cell cycle progression; cell cycle s phase; embryo; gene function; messenger rna; genomic instability; fibroblast; atm protein; cell cycle checkpoint; chromosome breakage; gene inactivation; r-loop; rna processing; atr protein; mouse embryo; embryo cell; genome stability; gene replication; replication; ribonuclease h; dna rna hybridization; open reading frame; ovum mutant candidate gene 1
Journal Title: Cell Cycle
Volume: 10
Issue: 1
ISSN: 1538-4101
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc.  
Date Published: 2011-01-01
Start Page: 108
End Page: 117
Language: English
DOI: 10.4161/cc.10.1.14379
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 21191184
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 4 March 2011" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Jerome Francois Artus
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