Publication | Open Access
NF-κB–induced R-loop accumulation and DNA damage select for nucleotide excision repair deficiencies in adult T cell leukemia
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Citations
37
References
2021
Year
Constitutive NF-κB activation (NF-κB<sup>CA</sup>) confers survival and proliferation advantages to cancer cells and frequently occurs in T/B cell malignancies including adult T cell leukemia (ATL) caused by human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1). Counterintuitively, NF-κB<sup>CA</sup> by the HTLV-1 transactivator/oncoprotein Tax induces a senescence response, and HTLV-1 infections in culture mostly result in senescence or cell-cycle arrest due to NF-κB<sup>CA</sup> How NF-κB<sup>CA</sup> induces senescence, and how ATL cells maintain NF-κB<sup>CA</sup> and avert senescence, remain unclear. Here we report that NF-κB<sup>CA</sup> by Tax increases R-loop accumulation and DNA double-strand breaks, leading to senescence. R-loop reduction via RNase H1 overexpression, and short hairpin RNA silencing of two transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (TC-NER) endonucleases that are critical for R-loop excision-<i>Xeroderma pigmentosum</i> F (XPF) and XPG-attenuate Tax senescence, enabling HTLV-1-infected cells to proliferate. Our data indicate that ATL cells are often deficient in XPF, XPG, or both and are hypersensitive to ultraviolet irradiation. This TC-NER deficiency is found in all ATL types. Finally, ATL cells accumulate R-loops in abundance. Thus, TC-NER deficits are positively selected during HTLV-1 infection because they facilitate the outgrowth of infected cells initially and aid the proliferation of ATL cells with NF-κB<sup>CA</sup> later. We suggest that TC-NER deficits and excess R-loop accumulation represent specific vulnerabilities that may be targeted for ATL treatment.
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