FANCJ suppresses microsatellite instability and lymphomagenesis independent of the fanconi anemia pathway

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Abstract

Microsatellites are short tandem repeat sequences that are highly prone to expansion/contraction due to their propensity to form non-B-form DNA structures, which hinder DNA polymerases and provoke template slippage. Although error correction by mismatch repair plays a key role in preventing microsatellite instability (MSI), which is a hallmark of Lynch syndrome, activities must also exist that unwind secondary structures to facilitate replication fidelity. Here, we report that Fancj helicase-deficient mice, while phenotypically resembling Fanconi anemia (FA), are also hypersensitive to replication inhibitors and predisposed to lymphoma. Whereas metabolism of G4-DNA structures is largely unaffected in Fancj−/− mice, high levels of spontaneous MSI occur, which is exacerbated by replication inhibition. In contrast, MSI is not observed in Fancd2−/− mice but is prevalent in human FA-J patients. Together, these data implicate FANCJ as a key factor required to counteract MSI, which is functionally distinct from its role in the FA pathway.

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Matsuzaki, K., Borel, V., Adelman, C. A., Schindler, D., & Boulton, S. J. (2015). FANCJ suppresses microsatellite instability and lymphomagenesis independent of the fanconi anemia pathway. Genes and Development, 29(24), 2532–2546. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.272740.115

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