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Publication : Evidence for replicative repair of DNA double-strand breaks leading to oncogenic translocation and gene amplification.

First Author  Difilippantonio MJ Year  2002
Journal  J Exp Med Volume  196
Issue  4 Pages  469-80
PubMed ID  12186839 Mgi Jnum  J:78496
Mgi Id  MGI:2384676 Doi  10.1084/jem.20020851
Citation  Difilippantonio MJ, et al. (2002) Evidence for replicative repair of DNA double-strand breaks leading to oncogenic translocation and gene amplification. J Exp Med 196(4):469-80
abstractText  Nonreciprocal translocations and gene amplifications are commonly found in human tumors. Although little is known about the mechanisms leading to such aberrations, tissue culture models predict that they can arise from DNA breakage, followed by cycles of chromatid fusion, asymmetric mitotic breakage, and replication. Mice deficient in both a nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) DNA repair protein and the p53 tumor suppressor develop lymphomas at an early age harboring amplification of an IgH/c-myc fusion. Here we report that these chromosomal rearrangements are initiated by a recombination activating gene (RAG)-induced DNA cleavage. Subsequent DNA repair events juxtaposing IgH and c-myc are mediated by a break-induced replication pathway. Cycles of breakage-fusion-bridge result in amplification of IgH/c-myc while chromosome stabilization occurs through telomere capture. Thus, mice deficient in NHEJ provide excellent models to study the etiology of unbalanced translocations and amplification events during tumorigenesis.
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