Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Oregon Health & Science University, Knight Cancer Institute, 3181 S.W. Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR 97239, USA.
Semin Cancer Biol. 2013 Apr;23(2):80-9. doi: 10.1016/j.semcancer.2013.01.001. Epub 2013 Jan 14.
Normal cellular division requires that the genome be faithfully replicated to ensure that unaltered genomic information is passed from one generation to the next. DNA replication initiates from thousands of origins scattered throughout the genome every cell cycle; however, not all origins initiate replication at the same time. A vast amount of work over the years indicates that different origins along each eukaryotic chromosome are activated in early, middle or late S phase. This temporal control of DNA replication is referred to as the replication-timing program. The replication-timing program represents a very stable epigenetic feature of chromosomes. Recent evidence has indicated that the replication-timing program can influence the spatial distribution of mutagenic events such that certain regions of the genome experience increased spontaneous mutagenesis compared to surrounding regions. This influence has helped shape the genomes of humans and other multicellular organisms and can affect the distribution of mutations in somatic cells. It is also becoming clear that the replication-timing program is deregulated in many disease states, including cancer. Aberrant DNA replication timing is associated with changes in gene expression, changes in epigenetic modifications and an increased frequency of structural rearrangements. Furthermore, certain replication timing changes can directly lead to overt genomic instability and may explain unique mutational signatures that are present in cells that have undergone the recently described processes of "chromothripsis" and "kataegis". In this review, we will discuss how the normal replication timing program, as well as how alterations to this program, can contribute to the evolution of the genomic landscape in normal and cancerous cells.
正常的细胞分裂需要基因组被忠实复制,以确保未改变的基因组信息从上一代传递到下一代。在每个细胞周期中,DNA 复制从散布在基因组中的数千个起始点开始;然而,并非所有起始点都在同一时间开始复制。多年来的大量工作表明,每条真核染色体上的不同起始点在 S 期的早期、中期或晚期被激活。这种 DNA 复制的时间控制被称为复制定时程序。复制定时程序代表了染色体非常稳定的表观遗传特征。最近的证据表明,复制定时程序可以影响诱变事件的空间分布,使得基因组的某些区域比周围区域经历更高的自发突变率。这种影响帮助塑造了人类和其他多细胞生物的基因组,并可能影响体细胞中突变的分布。越来越明显的是,复制定时程序在许多疾病状态下失调,包括癌症。异常的 DNA 复制定时与基因表达的变化、表观遗传修饰的变化以及结构重排的频率增加有关。此外,某些复制定时变化可以直接导致明显的基因组不稳定性,并可能解释在经历了最近描述的“染色体碎裂”和“kataegis”过程的细胞中存在的独特突变特征。在这篇综述中,我们将讨论正常的复制定时程序以及该程序的改变如何有助于正常和癌细胞中基因组景观的进化。