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Reference - PMID:27687866 - Genetic controls of DNA damage avoidance in response to acetaldehyde in fission yeast.

Reference summary

PubMed ID
PMID:27687866
Title
Genetic controls of DNA damage avoidance in response to acetaldehyde in fission yeast.
Authors
Noguchi C, Grothusen G, Anandarajan V, Martínez-Lage García M, Terlecky D, Corzo K, Tanaka K, Nakagawa H, Noguchi E
Citation
Cell Cycle 2017 Jan 02;16(1):45-58
Publication year
2017
Abstract
Acetaldehyde, a primary metabolite of alcohol, forms DNA adducts and disrupts the DNA replication process, causing genomic instability, a hallmark of cancer. Indeed, chronic alcohol consumption accounts for approximately 3.6% of all cancers worldwide. However, how the adducts are prevented and repaired after acetaldehyde exposure is not well understood. In this report, we used the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe as a model organism to comprehensively understand the genetic controls of DNA damage avoidance in response to acetaldehyde. We demonstrate that Atd1 functions as a major acetaldehyde detoxification enzyme that prevents accumulation of Rad52-DNA repair foci, while Atd2 and Atd3 have minor roles in acetaldehyde detoxification. We found that acetaldehyde causes DNA damage at the replication fork and activates the cell cycle checkpoint to coordinate cell cycle arrest with DNA repair. Our investigation suggests that acetaldehyde-mediated DNA adducts include interstrand-crosslinks and DNA-protein crosslinks. We also demonstrate that acetaldehyde activates multiple DNA repair pathways. Nucleotide excision repair and homologous recombination, which are both epistatically linked to the Fanconi anemia pathway, have major roles in acetaldehyde tolerance, while base excision repair and translesion synthesis also contribute to the prevention of acetaldehyde-dependent genomic instability. We also show the involvement of Wss1-related metalloproteases, Wss1 and Wss2, in acetaldehyde tolerance. These results indicate that acetaldehyde causes cellular stresses that require cells to coordinate multiple cellular processes in order to prevent genomic instability. Considering that acetaldehyde is a human carcinogen, our genetic studies serve as a guiding investigation into the mechanisms of acetaldehyde-dependent genomic instability and carcinogenesis.

Annotation

Multi-locus phenotype

FYPO:0005776 - normal growth on acetaldehyde

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FYPO:0005775 - sensitive to acetaldehyde

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FYPO:0000085 - sensitive to camptothecin

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FYPO:0000102 - sensitive to cisplatin

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FYPO:0000088 - sensitive to hydroxyurea

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Single locus phenotype

FYPO:0005778 - abnormal chromosome morphology during cellular response to acetaldehyde

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FYPO:0005777 - increased number of Rad52 foci during cellular response to acetaldehyde

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FYPO:0000972 - increased number of Rad52 foci during vegetative growth

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FYPO:0002683 - increased sensitivity to chemical

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FYPO:0005776 - normal growth on acetaldehyde

Genes:

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FYPO:0005775 - sensitive to acetaldehyde

Genes:

Genotypes:

FYPO:0000085 - sensitive to camptothecin

Genes:

Genotypes:

FYPO:0000102 - sensitive to cisplatin

Genes:

Genotypes:

FYPO:0000088 - sensitive to hydroxyurea

Genes:

Genotypes: