Cell Reports (Feb 2014)

Chaperoning HMGA2 Protein Protects Stalled Replication Forks in Stem and Cancer Cells

  • Haojie Yu,
  • Hong Hwa Lim,
  • Natalia O. Tjokro,
  • Padmapriya Sathiyanathan,
  • Suchitra Natarajan,
  • Tian Wei Chew,
  • Thomas Klonisch,
  • Steven D. Goodman,
  • Uttam Surana,
  • Peter Dröge

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2014.01.014
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 4
pp. 684 – 697

Abstract

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Maintaining genome integrity requires the accurate and complete replication of chromosomal DNA. This is of the utmost importance for embryonic stem cells (ESCs), which differentiate into cells of all lineages, including germ cells. However, endogenous and exogenous factors frequently induce stalling of replication forks in every cell cycle, which can trigger mutations and chromosomal instabilities. We show here that the oncofetal, nonhistone chromatin factor HMGA2 equips cells with a highly effective first-line defense mechanism against endonucleolytic collapse of stalled forks. This fork-stabilizing function most likely employs scaffold formation at branched DNA via multiple DNA-binding domains. Moreover, HMGA2 works independently of other human factors in two heterologous cell systems to prevent DNA strand breaks. This fork chaperone function seemingly evolved to preserve ESC genome integrity. It is hijacked by tumor (stem) cells to also guard their genomes against DNA-damaging agents widely used to treat cancer patients.