Synergistic lethality between BRCA1 and H3K9me2 loss reflects satellite derepression.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
April 1, 2019
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Padeken, Jan | |
Zeller, Peter | |
Katic, Iskra | |
Kalck, Veronique | |
Methot, Stephen P | |
Gasser, Susan M |
Subject(s)
Series
Genes & development
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0890-9369
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
30804228
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
has two histone H3 Lys9 methyltransferases, MET-2 (SETDB1 homolog) and SET-25 (G9a/SUV39H1 related). In worms, we found simple repeat sequences primarily marked by H3K9me2, while transposable elements and silent tissue-specific genes bear H3K9me3. RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) in histone methyltransferase (HMT) mutants shows that MET-2-mediated H3K9me2 is necessary for satellite repeat repression, while SET-25 silences a subset of transposable elements and tissue-specific genes through H3K9me3. A genome-wide synthetic lethality screen showed that RNA processing, nuclear RNA degradation, the BRCA1/BARD1 complex, and factors mediating replication stress survival are necessary for germline viability in worms lacking MET-2 but not SET-25. Unlike mutants, -null worms accumulated satellite repeat transcripts, which form RNA:DNA hybrids on repetitive sequences, additively with the loss of BRCA1 or BARD1. BRCA1/BARD1-mediated H2A ubiquitination and MET-2 deposited H3K9me2 on satellite repeats are partially interdependent, suggesting both that the loss of silencing generates BRCA-recruiting DNA damage and that BRCA1 recruitment by damage helps silence repeats. The artificial induction of MSAT1 transcripts can itself trigger damage-induced germline lethality in a wild-type background, arguing that the synthetic sterility upon BRCA1/BARD1 and H3K9me2 loss is directly linked to the DNA damage provoked by unscheduled satellite repeat transcription.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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Genes Dev.-2019-Padeken-436-51.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 5.72 MB | Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) | published |