Brown Rebecca E, Coxon Margo, Larsen Benjamin, Allison Maxwell, Chadha Ariana, Mittelstadt Isabelle, Mertz Tony M, Roberts Steven A, Freudenreich Catherine H
Program in Genetics, Molecular, and Cellular Biology, Tufts University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Boston, MA 02111.
School of Molecular Biosciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Jan 14;122(2):e2408179122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2408179122. Epub 2025 Jan 7.
CAG/CTG repeats are prone to expansion, causing several inherited human diseases. The initiating sources of DNA damage which lead to inaccurate repair of the repeat tract to cause expansions are not fully understood. Expansion-prone CAG/CTG repeats are actively transcribed and prone to forming stable R-loops with hairpin structures forming on the displaced single-stranded DNA (S-loops). We previously determined that damage by the cytosine deaminase, Fcy1, was required for both fragility and instability of CAG/CTG tracts engaged in R-loops. To determine whether this mechanism is more universal, we expressed human cytidine deaminases APOBEC3A (A3A), APOBEC3B (A3B), or activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) in our yeast system. We show that mutagenic activity of Apolipoprotein B messenger RNA-editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptides causes CAG/CTG fragility and instability, with A3A having the greatest effect followed by A3B and least from AID. A3A-induced repeat fragility was exacerbated by enrichment of R-loops at the repeat site. A3A and A3B-induced instability was dependent on the MutLγ nuclease and to a lesser extent, base excision repair factors. Deaminase activity assays on hairpin substrates containing CTG and GTC triplet sequences revealed that A3A prefers cytidines within the hairpin loop, and bulges in the hairpin stem alter preferred locations. Analysis of RNA expression levels in human cortex samples revealed that A3A is expressed in brain tissue that exhibits CAG/CTG repeat expansions and its expression is elevated in Huntington's disease (HD) patient samples. These results implicate cytidine deamination by A3A as a potential source of repeat expansions in HD and other CAG/CTG repeat expansion disorders.
CAG/CTG重复序列易于扩增,可导致多种人类遗传性疾病。导致重复序列修复不准确从而引起扩增的DNA损伤起始来源尚未完全明确。易于扩增的CAG/CTG重复序列会被积极转录,并易于形成稳定的R环,在被置换的单链DNA上形成发夹结构(S环)。我们之前确定,胞嘧啶脱氨酶Fcy1造成的损伤对于参与R环的CAG/CTG序列的脆性和不稳定性而言是必需的。为了确定这种机制是否更具普遍性,我们在酵母系统中表达了人类胞嘧啶脱氨酶载脂蛋白B信使核糖核酸编辑酶催化多肽(APOBEC3A,A3A)、APOBEC3B(A3B)或激活诱导的胞嘧啶脱氨酶(AID)。我们发现,载脂蛋白B信使核糖核酸编辑酶催化多肽的诱变活性会导致CAG/CTG序列出现脆性和不稳定性,其中A3A的影响最大,其次是A3B,AID的影响最小。重复序列位点处R环的富集加剧了A3A诱导的重复序列脆性。A3A和A3B诱导的不稳定性依赖于MutLγ核酸酶,在较小程度上还依赖于碱基切除修复因子。对含有CTG和GTC三联体序列的发夹底物进行的脱氨酶活性分析表明,A3A更倾向于作用于发夹环内的胞嘧啶,发夹茎中的凸起会改变偏好的作用位置。对人类皮质样本中RNA表达水平的分析表明,A3A在出现CAG/CTG重复序列扩增的脑组织中表达,且在亨廷顿病(HD)患者样本中的表达升高。这些结果表明,A3A介导的胞嘧啶脱氨作用可能是HD及其他CAG/CTG重复序列扩增疾病中重复序列扩增的一个潜在来源。