Abstract
Proper signalling and repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSB) is critical to prevent genome instability and diseases such as cancer. The packaging of DNA into chromatin, however, has evolved as a mere obstacle to these DSB responses. Posttranslational modifications and ATP-dependent chromatin remodelling help to overcome this barrier by modulating nucleosome structures and allow signalling and repair machineries access to DSBs in chromatin. Here we recap our current knowledge on how ATP-dependent SMARCA- and CHD-type chromatin remodellers alter chromatin structure during the signalling and repair of DSBs and discuss how their dysfunction impacts genome stability and human disease.This article is part of the themed issue ‘Chromatin modifiers and remodellers in DNA repair and signalling’.
Highlights
Our cells are exposed to various deleterious agents causing tens of thousands of lesions in the genome every day [1]
It has become clear that chromatin reorganization during the double-strand breaks (DSB) response is not a matter of switching chromatin from a ‘closed’ to ‘open’ state and vice versa
ATP-dependent chromatin remodellers induce chromatin structural changes that are crucial for these DSB responses
Summary
Our cells are exposed to various deleterious agents causing tens of thousands of lesions in the genome every day [1]. Of all the different DNA lesions that occur, DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are among the most toxic. If left unrepaired or repaired inaccurately, DSBs can lead to mutations and chromosomal translocations, thereby increasing predisposition to various human disorders such as cancer [2]. DSBs can be produced by exogenous sources such as ionizing radiation (IR) from cosmic radiation and medical treatments, or by chemical compounds such as bleomycin and cisplatin used in cancer chemotherapy. DSBs can be formed as by-products of intracellular metabolic activities producing reactive oxygen species (ROS), by the stalling and collapse of DNA replication forks and somatic recombination of antigen receptor loci [3,4,5]. Eukaryotic cells have evolved mechanisms collectively termed the DNA damage response (DDR) that detect, signal and repair DNA lesions such as DSBs to prevent genomic instability and human disease [2]
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More From: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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