By Duke Medicine News and Communications
Durham, N.C. – The chromosomes of mammals, including humans,
contain regions that are particularly prone to breaking under
conditions of stress and in cancer. Now, new research by
geneticists at Duke University Medical Center finds that yeast
cells also contain such weak links in DNA and begins to reveal
the molecular characteristics of these links that might help to
explain them.
The findings, published in the March 11, 2005, issue of Cell, suggest that yeast
may offer a useful model system for studying the fundamental
properties of so-called DNA fragile sites, providing new
insight into the chromosomal instability found in cancer cells,
said the researchers.
"If you look at solid tumors in humans, you see that the
chromosomes of cancer cells exhibit incredible instability,"
said Thomas Petes, Ph.D., chair of genetics and microbiology at
Duke. "Now, we have been able to mimic some of that instability
in yeast cells and can begin to ask whether there is anything
special that defines those places where chromosomes tend to
break."
Organisms normally exhibit extremely low rates of mutation
and chromosomal rearrangements. Conditions that elevate genomic
instability lead to an increase in cell death and, in some
cases, an increased incidence of cancer, Petes said.
Earlier work by other researchers had shown that mammalian
chromosomes break at particular sites under certain types of
stress or upon exposure to particular drugs, he said. Evidence
has suggested that chromosomes break when DNA replication – the
process by which DNA copies itself before cell division – slows
or stalls. However, the DNA characteristics that make
particular sites vulnerable to breakage had remained unclear,
he said.
The researchers slowed DNA replication in yeast cells by
reducing the availability of one form of DNA polymerase, which
are enzymes critical in DNA duplication. Yeast with abnormally
low levels of DNA polymerase exhibited higher frequencies of
chromosomal loss and aberrations than normal, resulting when
broken chromosomes re-joined with others to form novel
arrangements, the researchers reported.
Through further examination of breakpoints in a small region
of one chromosome, the researchers found that the fragile sites
occurred at locations along the DNA containing
"retrotransposons" called Ty elements. Retrotransposons are
mobile gene segments that duplicate themselves and insert the
new copies back into other sites in the genome.
The most common breakpoint involved two Ty elements in an
inverted, head-to-head orientation, they reported. That finding
led the researchers to suggest one possible mechanism for
chromosomal breaks and rearrangements.
A delay in DNA synthesis leads to an increase in
single-stranded DNA, the researchers explained. While DNA is in
a single-stranded form, multiple copies of retrotransposons are
more likely to interact, forming a kink in the DNA.
Rearrangements may occur when those kinks are improperly
excised and repaired by rejoining with retrotransposons on
other chromosomes.
"The current findings offer the first indication that yeast
have fragile sites," said Francene Lemoine, Ph.D., of Duke,
first author of the study. "The finding will allow us to
develop a simple model to study fragile sites in a way that
can't be done in more complex organisms."
The findings suggest that mammalian and yeast fragile sites
may have common features, an indication that a common mechanism
may underlie their occurrence, Petes said. Fragile sites in
mammalian cells tend to duplicate late and also include
sequences prone to forming kinks, or hairpin structures, like
those observed in yeast.
"The findings may ultimately help us better understand what
goes wrong in cancer cells, an important step in developing a
better plan of attack against the disease," Petes added.
Collaborators on the study include Natasha Degtyareva, of
Emory University, and Kirill Lobachev, of the Georgia Institute
of Technology. The work was supported by the National
Institutes of Health, the National Cancer Institute and the
National Science Foundation.