4.8 Article

DNA damage defines sites of recurrent chromosomal translocations in B lymphocytes

Journal

NATURE
Volume 484, Issue 7392, Pages 69-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature10909

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Funding

  1. Starr Foundation
  2. NIH [AI037526]
  3. NIAMS
  4. NCI, NIH

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Recurrent chromosomal translocations underlie both haematopoietic and solid tumours. Their origin has been ascribed to selection of random rearrangements, targeted DNA damage, or frequent nuclear interactions between translocation partners; however, the relative contribution of each of these elements has not been measured directly or on a large scale. Here we examine the role of nuclear architecture and frequency of DNA damage in the genesis of chromosomal translocations by measuring these parameters simultaneously in cultured mouse B lymphocytes. In the absence of recurrent DNA damage, translocations between Igh or Myc and all other genes are directly related to their contact frequency. Conversely, translocations associated with recurrent site-directed DNA damage are proportional to the rate of DNA break formation, as measured by replication protein A accumulation at the site of damage. Thus, non-targeted rearrangements reflect nuclear organization whereas DNA break formation governs the location and frequency of recurrent translocations, including those driving B-cell malignancies.

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