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Nucleosomes effectively shield DNA from radiation damage in living cells

Francesca Brambilla, José Manuel García-Manteiga, Emanuele Monteleone, Lena Hoelzen, Angelica Zocchi, A Agresti, Marco E. Bianchi

2020Nucleic Acids Research51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Eukaryotic DNA is organized in nucleosomes, which package DNA and regulate its accessibility to transcription, replication, recombination and repair. Here, we show that in living cells nucleosomes protect DNA from high-energy radiation and reactive oxygen species. We combined sequence-based methods (ATAC-seq and BLISS) to determine the position of both nucleosomes and double strand breaks (DSBs) in the genome of nucleosome-rich malignant mesothelioma cells, and of the same cells partially depleted of nucleosomes. The results were replicated in the human MCF-7 breast carcinoma cell line. We found that, for each genomic sequence, the probability of DSB formation is directly proportional to the fraction of time it is nucleosome-free; DSBs accumulate distal from the nucleosome dyad axis. Nucleosome free regions and promoters of actively transcribed genes are more sensitive to DSB formation, and consequently to mutation. We argue that this may be true for a variety of chemical and physical DNA damaging agents.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyNucleosomeDNA damageDNAShieldGeneticsCell biologyHistonePaleontologyDNA Repair MechanismsCarcinogens and Genotoxicity AssessmentCRISPR and Genetic Engineering
Nucleosomes effectively shield DNA from radiation damage in living cells | Litcius