TY - JOUR
T1 - An RNAi screen in human cell lines reveals conserved DNA damage repair pathways that mitigate formaldehyde sensitivity
AU - Juarez, Eleonora
AU - Chambwe, Nyasha
AU - Tang, Weiliang
AU - Mitchell, Asia D.
AU - Owen, Nichole
AU - Kumari, Anuradha
AU - Monnat, Raymond J.
AU - McCullough, Amanda K.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health awards R01 CA106858 and a Diversity Supplement (PA-16-288) to R01CA106858 to AKM, P01 CA077852 to RJM Jr., and Department of Defense Bone Marrow Failure Program Award BM130174 to RJM Jr. Funding for open access charge: Oregon Health & Science University .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2018/12
Y1 - 2018/12
N2 - Formaldehyde is a ubiquitous DNA damaging agent, with human exposures occurring from both exogenous and endogenous sources. Formaldehyde exposure can result in multiple types of DNA damage, including DNA-protein crosslinks and thus, is representative of other exposures that induce DNA-protein crosslinks such as cigarette smoke, automobile exhaust, wood smoke, metals, ionizing radiation, and certain chemotherapeutics. Our objective in this study was to identify the genes necessary to mitigate formaldehyde toxicity following chronic exposure in human cells. We used siRNAs that targeted 320 genes representing all major human DNA repair and damage response pathways, in order to assess cell proliferation following siRNA depletion and subsequent formaldehyde treatment. Three unrelated human cell lines frequently used in genotoxicity studies (SW480, U-2 OS and GM00639) were used to identify common pathways involved in mitigating formaldehyde sensitivity. Although there were gene-specific differences among the cell lines, four inter-related cellular pathways were determined to mitigate formaldehyde toxicity: homologous recombination, DNA double-strand break repair, ionizing radiation response and DNA replication. Additional insight into cell line-specific response patterns was obtained by using a combination of exome sequencing and Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia genomic data. The results of this DNA damage repair pathway-focused siRNA screen for formaldehyde toxicity in human cells provide a foundation for detailed mechanistic analyses of pathway-specific involvement in the response to environmentally-induced DNA-protein crosslinks and, more broadly, genotoxicity studies using human and other mammalian cell lines.
AB - Formaldehyde is a ubiquitous DNA damaging agent, with human exposures occurring from both exogenous and endogenous sources. Formaldehyde exposure can result in multiple types of DNA damage, including DNA-protein crosslinks and thus, is representative of other exposures that induce DNA-protein crosslinks such as cigarette smoke, automobile exhaust, wood smoke, metals, ionizing radiation, and certain chemotherapeutics. Our objective in this study was to identify the genes necessary to mitigate formaldehyde toxicity following chronic exposure in human cells. We used siRNAs that targeted 320 genes representing all major human DNA repair and damage response pathways, in order to assess cell proliferation following siRNA depletion and subsequent formaldehyde treatment. Three unrelated human cell lines frequently used in genotoxicity studies (SW480, U-2 OS and GM00639) were used to identify common pathways involved in mitigating formaldehyde sensitivity. Although there were gene-specific differences among the cell lines, four inter-related cellular pathways were determined to mitigate formaldehyde toxicity: homologous recombination, DNA double-strand break repair, ionizing radiation response and DNA replication. Additional insight into cell line-specific response patterns was obtained by using a combination of exome sequencing and Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia genomic data. The results of this DNA damage repair pathway-focused siRNA screen for formaldehyde toxicity in human cells provide a foundation for detailed mechanistic analyses of pathway-specific involvement in the response to environmentally-induced DNA-protein crosslinks and, more broadly, genotoxicity studies using human and other mammalian cell lines.
KW - DNA damage response
KW - DNA repair
KW - Double-strand break repair
KW - Formaldehyde
KW - siRNA screen
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U2 - 10.1016/j.dnarep.2018.10.002
DO - 10.1016/j.dnarep.2018.10.002
M3 - Article
C2 - 30389308
AN - SCOPUS:85055211228
SN - 1568-7864
VL - 72
SP - 1
EP - 9
JO - DNA Repair
JF - DNA Repair
ER -