Abstract

Homologous recombination (HR) is critical for the repair of double strand breaks and broken replication forks. Although HR is mostly error free, inherent or environmental conditions that either suppress or induce HR cause genomic instability. Despite its importance in carcinogenesis, due to limitations in our ability to detect HR in vivo, little is known about HR in mammalian tissues. Here, we describe a mouse model in which a direct repeat HR substrate is targeted to the ubiquitously expressed Rosa26 locus. In the Rosa26 Direct Repeat-GFP (RaDR-GFP) mice, HR between two truncated EGFP expression cassettes can yield a fluorescent signal. In-house image analysis software provides a rapid method for quantifying recombination events within intact tissues, and the frequency of recombinant cells can be evaluated by flow cytometry. A comparison among 11 tissues shows that the frequency of recombinant cells varies by more than two orders of magnitude among tissues, wherein HR in the brain is the lowest. Additionally, de novo recombination events accumulate with age in the colon, showing that this mouse model can be used to study the impact of chronic exposures on genomic stability. Exposure to N-methyl-N-nitrosourea, an alkylating agent similar to the cancer chemotherapeutic temozolomide, shows that the colon, liver and pancreas are susceptible to DNA damage-induced HR. Finally, histological analysis of the underlying cell types reveals that pancreatic acinar cells and liver hepatocytes undergo HR and also that HR can be specifically detected in colonic somatic stem cells. Taken together, the RaDR-GFP mouse model provides new understanding of how tissue and age impact susceptibility to HR, and enables future studies of genetic, environmental and physiological factors that modulate HR in mammals.

Highlights

  • DNA is constantly subjected to endogenous and environmental DNA damaging agents that can lead to toxicity, mutations, and disease [1]

  • New recombination events accumulate over time, which contributes to our understanding of why our risk for cancer increases with age

  • This mouse model provides new understanding of this important DNA repair pathway in vivo, and enables future studies of genetic, environmental and physiological factors that impact the risk of Homologous recombination (HR)-induced sequence rearrangements in vivo

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Summary

Introduction

DNA is constantly subjected to endogenous and environmental DNA damaging agents that can lead to toxicity, mutations, and disease [1]. Maintaining genomic stability in the face of the thousands of DNA lesions that are formed in each cell every day poses a major challenge, especially in the case of double strand breaks (DSBs), which are acutely toxic and can lead to the loss of millions of base pairs if a portion of a chromosome is lost [1,2]. It is likely that HR events contribute to sequence changes in virtually all cancers, since loss of function of almost all tumor suppressor genes requires LOH, and many, if not most, LOH events are caused by HR [14,15,16].

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