4.8 Article

Tousled-like kinases stabilize replication forks and show synthetic lethality with checkpoint and PARP inhibitors

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 4, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aat4985

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF82]
  2. European Commission Innovative Training Networks FP7 aDDRess
  3. European Research Council [281,765, 724436]
  4. Danish Cancer Society
  5. Independent Research Fund Denmark
  6. NEYE Foundation
  7. Novo Nordisk Foundation
  8. Lundbeck Foundation
  9. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) [BFU2015-68354]
  10. MINECO through the Centres of Excellence Severo Ochoa award
  11. Centres de Recerca de Catalunya Programme of the Catalan Government
  12. Taipei Medical University [TMU104-AE1-B23]
  13. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) [105-2311-B-038-002, 106-2311-B-038-001]
  14. Fundacio La Caixa
  15. Severo Ochoa Formacion de Personal Investigador fellowship (MINECO)

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DNA sequence and epigenetic information embedded in chromatin must be faithfully duplicated and transmitted to daughter cells during cell division. However, how chromatin assembly and DNA replication are integrated remains unclear. We examined the contribution of the Tousled-like kinases 1 and 2 (TLK1/TLK2) to chromatin assembly and maintenance of replication fork integrity. We show that TLK activity is required for DNA replication and replication-coupled nucleosome assembly and that lack of TLK activity leads to replication fork stalling and the accumulation of single-stranded DNA, a phenotype distinct from ASF1 depletion. Consistent with these results, sustained TLK depletion gives rise to replication-dependent DNA damage and p53-dependent cell cycle arrest in G(1). We find that deficient replication-coupled de novo nucleosome assembly renders replication forks unstable and highly dependent on the ATR and CHK1 checkpoint kinases, as well as poly(adenosine 5'-diphosphate-ribose) polymerase (PARP) activity, to avoid collapse. Human cancer data revealed frequent up-regulation of TLK genes and an association with poor patient outcome in multiple types of cancer, and depletion of TLK activity leads to increased replication stress and DNA damage in a panel of cancer cells. Our results reveal a critical role for TLKs in chromatin replication and suppression of replication stress and identify a synergistic lethal relationship with checkpoint signaling and PARP that could be exploited in treatment of a broad range of cancers.

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