Abstract

Trinucleotide repeat (TNR) expansion and deletion are responsible for over 40 neurodegenerative diseases and associated with cancer. TNRs can undergo somatic instability that is mediated by DNA damage and repair and gene transcription. Recent studies have pointed toward a role for R-loops in causing TNR expansion and deletion, and it has been shown that base excision repair (BER) can result in CAG repeat deletion from R-loops in yeast. However, it remains unknown how BER in R-loops can mediate TNR instability. In this study, using biochemical approaches, we examined BER enzymatic activities and their influence on TNR R-loops. We found that AP endonuclease 1 incised an abasic site on the nontemplate strand of a TNR R-loop, creating a double-flap intermediate containing an RNA:DNA hybrid that subsequently inhibited polymerase β (pol β) synthesis of TNRs. This stimulated flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1) cleavage of TNRs engaged in an R-loop. Moreover, we showed that FEN1 also efficiently cleaved the RNA strand, facilitating pol β loop/hairpin bypass synthesis and the resolution of TNR R-loops through BER. Consequently, this resulted in fewer TNRs synthesized by pol β than those removed by FEN1, thereby leading to repeat deletion. Our results indicate that TNR R-loops preferentially lead to repeat deletion during BER by disrupting the balance between the addition and removal of TNRs. Our discoveries open a new avenue for the treatment and prevention of repeat expansion diseases and cancer.

Highlights

  • Trinucleotide repeat (TNR) instability is responsible for over 40 human neurodegenerative diseases, including Huntington’s disease (CAG/CTG) and Friedreich’s ataxia (GAA/TTC) among others [1,2,3] and associated with cancers [4, 5]

  • To elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which TNR Rloops induce repeat instability through base excision repair (BER), we initially examined whether AP endonuclease 1 (APE1) could incise the 59-end of an abasic site (THF) located in the middle of (GAA)20 and (CAG)20 R-loops (Fig. 1)

  • We found that APE1 (0.1–100 nM) efficiently incised the abasic site located in the duplex (GAA)20 and (CAG)20 repeat substrates (Fig. 1 (A and B), top panels)

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Summary

Introduction

Trinucleotide repeat (TNR) instability is responsible for over 40 human neurodegenerative diseases, including Huntington’s disease (CAG/CTG) and Friedreich’s ataxia (GAA/TTC) among others [1,2,3] and associated with cancers [4, 5]. The results showed that the APE1 cleavage activity on the abasic site in the nontemplate single-strand DNA in the (GAA)20 and (CAG)20 R-loops was significantly less efficient compared with its activity in the duplex repeats.

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