Affiliation: | 1.Laboratoire de Radiopathologie, Institut de Radiobiologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire,CEA,Fontenay-aux-Roses,France;2.UMR 967,INSERM,Fontenay-aux-Roses,France;3.UMR 967,Université Paris VII,Fontenay-aux-Roses,France;4.UMR 967,Université Paris XI,Fontenay-aux-Roses,France;5.CEA-DSV/iRCM, INSERM U935, Institut A. Lwoff,Villejuif Cedex,France;6.Centre de Recherche de Paris,Sanofi-Aventis,Vitry-sur-Seine,France |
Abstract: | Functional telomeres are protected from non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) and homologous recombination (HR) DNA repair pathways. Replication is a critical period for telomeres because of the requirement for reconstitution of functional protected telomere conformations, a process that involves DNA repair proteins. Using knockdown of DNA-PKcs and Rad51 expression in three different cell lines, we demonstrate the respective involvement of NHEJ and HR in the formation of telomere aberrations induced by the G-quadruplex ligand 360A during or after replication. HR contributed to specific chromatid-type aberrations (telomere losses and doublets) affecting the lagging strand telomeres, whereas DNA-PKcs-dependent NHEJ was responsible for sister telomere fusions as a direct consequence of G-quadruplex formation and/or stabilization induced by 360A on parental telomere G strands. NHEJ and HR activation at telomeres altered mitotic progression in treated cells. In particular, NHEJ-mediated sister telomere fusions were associated with altered metaphase-anaphase transition and anaphase bridges and resulted in cell death during mitosis or early G1. Collectively, these data elucidate specific molecular and cellular mechanisms triggered by telomere targeting by the G-quadruplex ligand 360A, leading to cancer cell death. |