Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Oncogene. 2011 Feb 10;30(6):751-6. doi: 10.1038/onc.2010.480. Epub 2010 Nov 8.
Characterization of the direct effects of DNA-damaging agents shows how DNA lesions lead to specific mutations. Yet, serum from Hiroshima survivors, Chernobyl liquidators and radiotherapy patients can induce a clastogenic effect on naive cells, showing indirect induction of genomic instability that persists years after exposure. Such indirect effects are not restricted to ionizing radiation, as chemical genotoxins also induce heritable and transmissible genomic instability phenotypes. Although such indirect induction of genomic instability is well described, the underlying mechanism has remained enigmatic. Here, we show that mouse embryonic stem cells exposed to γ-radiation bear the effects of the insult for weeks. Specifically, conditioned media from the progeny of exposed cells can induce DNA damage and homologous recombination in naive cells. Notably, cells exposed to conditioned media also elicit a genome-destabilizing effect on their neighbouring cells, thus demonstrating transmission of genomic instability. Moreover, we show that the underlying basis for the memory of an insult is completely dependent on two of the major DNA cytosine methyltransferases, Dnmt1 and Dnmt3a. Targeted disruption of these genes in exposed cells completely eliminates transmission of genomic instability. Furthermore, transient inactivation of Dnmt1, using a tet-suppressible allele, clears the memory of the insult, thus protecting neighbouring cells from indirect induction of genomic instability. We have thus demonstrated that a single exposure can lead to long-term, genome-destabilizing effects that spread from cell to cell, and we provide a specific molecular mechanism for these persistent bystander effects. Collectively, our results impact the current understanding of risks from toxin exposures and suggest modes of intervention for suppressing genomic instability in people exposed to carcinogenic genotoxins.
对 DNA 损伤剂的直接作用进行特征分析表明,DNA 损伤如何导致特定的突变。然而,来自广岛幸存者、切尔诺贝利清理人员和放疗患者的血清可以在未成熟细胞中诱导出断裂效应,表明基因组不稳定性的间接诱导,这种不稳定性在暴露多年后仍然存在。这种间接效应不仅限于电离辐射,因为化学遗传毒素也会诱导可遗传和可传播的基因组不稳定性表型。尽管这种间接诱导的基因组不稳定性已经得到了很好的描述,但潜在的机制仍然是个谜。在这里,我们表明,暴露于γ辐射的小鼠胚胎干细胞会在数周内承受这种损伤的影响。具体来说,来自暴露细胞后代的条件培养基可以在未成熟细胞中诱导 DNA 损伤和同源重组。值得注意的是,暴露于条件培养基的细胞也会对其相邻细胞产生基因组不稳定效应,从而证明了基因组不稳定性的传递。此外,我们还表明,这种损伤记忆的潜在基础完全依赖于两种主要的 DNA 胞嘧啶甲基转移酶,Dnmt1 和 Dnmt3a。在暴露细胞中靶向敲除这些基因完全消除了基因组不稳定性的传递。此外,使用可抑制 tet 的等位基因短暂失活 Dnmt1,可以清除损伤记忆,从而保护相邻细胞免受间接诱导的基因组不稳定性。因此,我们已经证明,单次暴露可以导致长期的、基因组不稳定的效应,这些效应会从一个细胞传播到另一个细胞,我们为这些持续的旁观者效应提供了一个特定的分子机制。总的来说,我们的结果影响了对毒素暴露风险的现有理解,并为抑制暴露于致癌遗传毒素的人群中的基因组不稳定性提供了干预模式。