Hypoxia causes downregulation of mismatch repair system and genomic instability in stem cells

被引:65
|
作者
Javier Rodriguez-Jimenez, Francisco [1 ]
Moreno-Manzano, Victoria [1 ]
Lucas-Dominguez, Rut [1 ]
Sanchez-Puelles, Jose-Maria [1 ]
机构
[1] Ctr Invest Principe Felipe, Valencia, Spain
关键词
mismatch repair; hypoxia-inducible factor; microsatellite instability; hypoxia; cancer stem cells;
D O I
10.1634/stemcells.2007-1016
中图分类号
Q813 [细胞工程];
学科分类号
摘要
The DNA mismatch repair (MMR) system maintains genomic integrity by correcting replication errors: its malfunction causes genomic instability in several tumor types. Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF1 alpha), the major regulator of the processes that occur in hypoxia and certain epigenetic events downregulate the expression of MMR genes in cancer cells. However, there is a lack of information regarding MMR regulation and the genetic stability of stem cells under hypoxic conditions. The expression of the MMR system is downregulated in murine and human stem cells cultured in hypoxia, which correlates with lower DNA repair activity in neural stem cells. We observed, through the use of short hairpin loop RNAi expression constructs, that HIF1 alpha positively regulated MLH1 and MSH6 when the C17.2 neural stem cells were exposed to short-term hypoxia. However, in prolonged exposure to oxygen depletion, the reduced transcriptional activation of MMR genes was directed by specific epigenetic events. Chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments showed a hypoacetylated/hypermethylated histone H3 and lower SP1 binding within MLH1 and MSH6 adjacent promoter regions. Treatment with the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A increased histone H3 acetylation and SP1 occupancy and enhanced MMR expression. Sequencing of microsatellite markers revealed genomic instability in the murine and human stem cells grown under hypoxia. Thus, the present article reports, for the first time in the stem cell field, experimental data that indicate that hypoxic niches are an environment in which stem cells might undergo genomic instability, which could lie at the origin of subpopulations with cancer stem cell properties.
引用
收藏
页码:2052 / 2062
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Elevated retrotransposon activity and genomic instability in primed pluripotent stem cells
    Haifeng Fu
    Weiyu Zhang
    Niannian Li
    Jiao Yang
    Xiaoying Ye
    Chenglei Tian
    Xinyi Lu
    Lin Liu
    Genome Biology, 22
  • [42] Radiation-induced genomic instability in immortalized haemopoietic stem cells
    McIlrath, J
    Lorimore, SA
    Coates, PJ
    Wright, EG
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION BIOLOGY, 2003, 79 (01) : 27 - 34
  • [43] Genomic instability in cultured stem cells: associated risks and underlying mechanisms
    Ross, Andrew L.
    Leder, Daniel E.
    Weiss, Jonathan
    Izakovic, Jan
    Grichnik, James M.
    REGENERATIVE MEDICINE, 2011, 6 (05) : 653 - 662
  • [44] Elevated retrotransposon activity and genomic instability in primed pluripotent stem cells
    Fu, Haifeng
    Zhang, Weiyu
    Li, Niannian
    Yang, Jiao
    Ye, Xiaoying
    Tian, Chenglei
    Lu, Xinyi
    Liu, Lin
    GENOME BIOLOGY, 2021, 22 (01)
  • [45] Association of genomic instability, and the methylation status of imprinted genes and mismatch-repair genes, with neural tube defects
    Liu, Zhuo
    Wang, Zhigang
    Li, Yuanyuan
    Ouyang, Shengrong
    Chang, Huibo
    Zhang, Ting
    Zheng, Xiaoying
    Wu, Jianxin
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2012, 20 (05) : 516 - 520
  • [46] Demonstration That Loss of TET2 Impairs DNA Mismatch Repair Resulting in Clonally Restricted Genomic Instability
    Jiang, Dongxu
    Pan, Feng
    Guan, Yihong
    Gu, Xiaorong
    Kawashima, Naomi
    Singh, Divya Jyoti
    Dima, Danai
    Qu, Guangbo
    Greenberg, Edward F.
    Visconte, Valeria
    Mian, Omar
    Xu, Mingjiang
    Maciejewski, Jaroslaw P.
    Jha, Babal K.
    BLOOD, 2022, 140 : 1989 - 1990
  • [47] Different in vivo and in vitro transformation of intestinal stem cells in mismatch repair deficiency
    K Keysselt
    T Kreutzmann
    K Rother
    C Kerner
    K Krohn
    J Przybilla
    P Buske
    H Löffler-Wirth
    M Loeffler
    J Galle
    G Aust
    Oncogene, 2017, 36 : 2750 - 2761
  • [48] Loss of mismatch repair promotes a direct selective advantage in human stem cells
    Madden-Hennessey, Kirby
    Gupta, Dipika
    Radecki, Alexander A.
    Guild, Caroline
    Rath, Abhijit
    Heinen, Christopher D.
    STEM CELL REPORTS, 2022, 17 (12): : 2661 - 2673
  • [49] Association of genomic instability, and the methylation status of imprinted genes and mismatch-repair genes, with neural tube defects
    Zhuo Liu
    Zhigang Wang
    Yuanyuan Li
    Shengrong Ouyang
    Huibo Chang
    Ting Zhang
    Xiaoying Zheng
    Jianxin Wu
    European Journal of Human Genetics, 2012, 20 : 516 - 520
  • [50] Different in vivo and in vitro transformation of intestinal stem cells in mismatch repair deficiency
    Keysselt, K.
    Kreutzmann, T.
    Rother, K.
    Kerner, C.
    Krohn, K.
    Przybilla, J.
    Buske, P.
    Loeffler-Wirth, H.
    Loeffler, M.
    Galle, J.
    Aust, G.
    ONCOGENE, 2017, 36 (19) : 2750 - 2761