Abstract

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a malignant tumor of the central nervous system (CNS). The poor prognosis of GBM due to resistance to therapy has been associated with high chromosomal instability (CIN). Replication stress is a major cause of CIN that manifests as chromosome rearrangements, fragility, and breaks, including those cytologically expressed within specific chromosome regions named common fragile sites (CFSs). In this work, we characterized the expression of human CFSs in the glioblastoma U-251 MG cell line upon treatment with the inhibitor of DNA polymerase alpha aphidicolin (APH). We observed 52 gaps/breaks located within previously characterized CFSs. We found 17 to be CFSs in GBM cells upon treatment with APH, showing a frequency equal to at least 1% of the total gaps/breaks. We report that two CFSs localized to regions FRA2E (2p13/p12) and FRA2F (2q22) were only found in U-251 MG cells, but not lymphocytes or fibroblasts, after APH treatment. Notably, these glioblastoma-specific CFSs had a relatively high expression compared to the other CFSs with breakage frequency between ∼7 and 9%. Presence of long genes, incomplete replication, and delayed DNA synthesis during mitosis (MiDAS) after APH treatment suggest that an impaired replication process may contribute to this loci-specific fragility in U-251 MG cells. Altogether, our work offers a characterization of common fragile site expression in glioblastoma U-251 MG cells that may be further exploited for cytogenetic and clinical studies to advance our understanding of this incurable cancer.

Highlights

  • Fragile sites are defined as gaps/breaks induced by replication stress that are visible on metaphase chromosomes

  • To understand how replication stress affects Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) cells, we evaluated the mitotic index of U-251 MG glioblastoma cells compared with primary lymphocytes and MRC-5 fibroblasts upon treatment with a low dose of APH (0.4 μM) for 24 h

  • Our work presents a characterization of common fragile sites (CFSs) expression in a cell line derived from the malignant brain tumor GBM

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Summary

Introduction

Fragile sites are defined as gaps/breaks induced by replication stress that are visible on metaphase chromosomes. Recent evidence shows that CFSs are chromatin regions with a defective condensin loading due to an under-replicated state which persists until mitosis (Boteva et al, 2020). These faulty chromatin-folding regions have been detected as sites of mitotic DNA synthesis (MiDAS) (Ji et al, 2020; Macheret et al, 2020), implying that chromatin conformation and delayed replication further underline their fragility (Miotto et al, 2016)

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