The mechanism of action of genes with high mutation frequency in cancer

After the p53 tumour suppressor gene, the genes most frequently found mutated in cancer are those encoding two proteins of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodelling complex. This complex's function is to "accommodate" the histones that cover the DNA of the chromosomes so that the processes of transcription, DNA repair and replication or chromosome segregation can occur, as appropriate. A group from the University of Seville has demonstrated at CABIMER that the inactivation of BRG1, the factor responsible for the enzymatic activity of the SWI/SNF complexes, leads to high genetic instability, a characteristic common to the vast majority of tumours.

This study's most important contribution is that it deciphers the mechanism by which this occurs. The SWI/SNF complex is necessary for cells to resolve the conflicts that occur in chromosomes when the transcription and replication machineries collide at the same site and hinder each other. If any part of the SWI/SNF complex is mutated, DNA replication is defective and chromosomal breaks occur, largely promoted by the accumulation of DNA-RNA hybrids at the sites where conflicts occur.

This work solves a very significant problem in molecular and cell biology by providing the SWI/SNF complex with a new function, and opens the possibility that this chromatin remodeler may be a tumour suppressor and that DNA-RNA hybrids constitute an important source of tumourigenicity. The study is part of the ERC Advanced project by Andrés Aguilera, professor of genetics, and its main author is Dr. Aleix Bayona-Feliu, working for the Juan de la Cierva programme, and is published in the prestigious journal Nature Genetics.

Credit: 
University of Seville