Human DNA polymerase η (Pol η) is best known for its role in responding to UV irradiation-induced genome damage. We have recently observed that Pol η is also required for the stability of common fragile sites (CFSs), whose rearrangements are considered a driving force of oncogenesis. Here, we explored the molecular mechanisms underlying this newly identified role. We demonstrated that Pol η accumulated at CFSs upon partial replication stress and could efficiently replicate non-B DNA sequences with in CFSs. Pol η deficiency led to persistence of checkpoint-blind under-replicated CFS regions in mitosis, detectable as FANCD2-associated chromosomal sites that were transmitted to daughter cells in 53BP1-shielded nuclear bodies. Expression of a catalytically inactive mutant of Pol η increased replication fork stalling and activated the replication checkpoint. These data are consistent with the requirement of Pol η -dependent DNA synthesis during S phase at replication forks stalled in CFS regions to suppress CFS instability by preventing checkpoint-blind underreplicated DNA in mitosis. © 2013 Bergoglio et al.
CITATION STYLE
Bergoglio, V., Boyer, A. S., Walsh, E., Naim, V., Legube, G., Lee, M. Y. W. T., … Hoffmann, J. S. (2013). DNA synthesis by pol η promotes fragile site stability by preventing under-replicated DNA in mitosis. Journal of Cell Biology, 201(3), 395–408. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201207066
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