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A Surge of DNA Damage Links Transcriptional Reprogramming and Hematopoietic Deficit in Fanconi Anemiaopen access

Authors
Shen, XiWang, RuiKim, Moon JongHu, QianghuaHsu, Chih-ChaoYao, JunKlages-Mundt, NaehTian, YanyanLynn, EricaBrewer, Thomas F.Zhang, YileiArun, BanuGan, BoyiAndreeff, MichaelTakeda, ShunichiChen, JunjiePark, Jae-ilShi, XiaobingChang, Christopher J.Jung, Sung YunQin, JunLi, Lei
Issue Date
Dec-2020
Publisher
CELL PRESS
Keywords
bone marrow failure; differentiation; DNA damage; Fanconi anemia; formaldehyde; hematopoiesis; transcription reprogramming
Citation
MOLECULAR CELL, v.80, no.6, pp 1013 - +
Journal Title
MOLECULAR CELL
Volume
80
Number
6
Start Page
1013
End Page
+
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/90210
DOI
10.1016/j.molcel.2020.11.040
ISSN
1097-2765
1097-4164
Abstract
Impaired DNA crosslink repair leads to Fanconi anemia (FA), characterized by a unique manifestation of bone marrow failure and pancytopenia among diseases caused by DNA damage response defects. As a germline disorder, why the hematopoietic hierarchy is specifically affected is not fully understood. We find that reprogramming transcription during hematopoietic differentiation results in an overload of genotoxic stress, which causes aborted differentiation and depletion of FA mutant progenitor cells. DNA damage onset most likely arises from formaldehyde, an obligate by-product of oxidative protein demethylation during transcription regulation. Our results demonstrate that rapid and extensive transcription reprogramming associated with hematopoietic differentiation poses a major threat to genome stability and cell viability in the absence of the FA pathway. The connection between differentiation and DNA damage accumulation reveals a novel mechanism of genome scarring and is critical to exploring therapies to counteract the aplastic anemia for the treatment of FA patients.
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