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Increased replication origin firing links replication stress to whole chromosomal instability in human cancer

Nicolas Böhly, Ann-Kathrin Schmidt, Xiaoxiao Zhang, Benjamin O. Slusarenko, Magdalena Hennecke, Maik Kschischo, Holger Bastians

2022Cell Reports54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a hallmark of cancer and comprises structural CIN (S-CIN) and numerical or whole chromosomal CIN (W-CIN). Recent work indicated that replication stress (RS), known to contribute to S-CIN, also affects mitotic chromosome segregation, possibly explaining the common co-existence of S-CIN and W-CIN in human cancer. Here, we show that RS-induced increased origin firing is sufficient to trigger W-CIN in human cancer cells. We discovered that overexpression of origin firing genes, including GINS1 and CDC45, correlates with W-CIN in human cancer specimens and causes W-CIN in otherwise chromosomally stable human cells. Furthermore, modulation of the ATR-CDK1-RIF1 axis increases the number of firing origins and leads to W-CIN. Importantly, chromosome missegregation upon additional origin firing is mediated by increased mitotic microtubule growth rates, a mitotic defect prevalent in chromosomally unstable cancer cells. Thus, our study identifies increased replication origin firing as a cancer-relevant trigger for chromosomal instability.

Topics & Concepts

Replication (statistics)Genome instabilityGeneticsBiologyChromosome instabilityDNA replicationReplication timingDNA replication factor CDT1Licensing factorComputational biologyGeneOrigin of replicationDNAControl of chromosome duplicationDNA damageVirologyChromosomeDNA Repair MechanismsMicrotubule and mitosis dynamicsCancer-related Molecular Pathways
Increased replication origin firing links replication stress to whole chromosomal instability in human cancer | Litcius