Published September 2, 2021 | Version v1
Publication

The SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex helps resolve R-loop-mediated transcription–replication conflicts

Description

ATP-dependent chromatin remodelers are commonly mutated in human cancer. Mammalian SWI/SNF complexes comprise three conserved multisubunit chromatin remodelers (cBAF, ncBAF and PBAF) that share the BRG1 (also known as SMARCA4) subunit responsible for the main ATPase activity. BRG1 is the most frequently mutated Snf2-like ATPase in cancer. In the present study, we have investigated the role of SWI/SNF in genome instability, a hallmark of cancer cells, given its role in transcription, DNA replication and DNA-damage repair. We show that depletion of BRG1 increases R-loops and R-loop-dependent DNA breaks, as well as transcription–replication (T-R) conflicts. BRG1 colocalizes with R-loops and replication fork blocks, as determined by FANCD2 foci, with BRG1 depletion being epistatic to FANCD2 silencing. Our study, extended to other components of SWI/SNF, uncovers a key role of the SWI/SNF complex, in particular cBAF, in helping resolve R-loop-mediated T-R conflicts, thus, unveiling a new mechanism by which chromatin remodeling protects genome integrity.

Abstract

European Research Council ERC2014 AdG669898 TARLOOP

Abstract

Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad BFU2016-75058-P

Abstract

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación PDI2019-104270GB-I00/BMC

Additional details

Created:
March 25, 2023
Modified:
November 30, 2023