Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1544
Title: Sustained pigmentation causes DNA damage and invokes translesion polymerase Polκ for repair in melanocytes
Authors: Ghazi, Madeeha
Khanna, Shivangi
Subramaniam, Yogaspoorthi
Rengaraju, Jeyashri
Sultan, Farina
Gupta, Iti
Sharma, Kanupriya
Chandna, Sudhir
Gokhale, Rajesh S
Natarajan, Vivek T
Issue Date: Oct-2023
Publisher: The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research
Abstract: Melanin protects skin cells from ultraviolet radiation-induced DNA damage. However, intermediates of eumelanin are highly reactive quinones that are potentially genotoxic. In this study, we systematically investigate the effect of sustained elevation of melanogenesis and map the consequent cellular repair response of melanocytes. Pigmentation increases γH2AX foci, DNA abasic sites, causes replication stress and invokes translesion polymerase Polκ in primary human melanocytes, as well as mouse melanoma cells. Confirming the causal link, CRISPR-based genetic ablation of tyrosinase results in depigmented cells with low Polκ levels. During pigmentation, Polκ activates replication stress response and keeps a check on uncontrolled proliferation of cells harboring melanin-damaged DNA. The mutational landscape observed in human melanoma could in part explain the error-prone bypass of DNA lesions by Polκ, whose absence would lead to genome instability. Thereby, translesion polymerase Polκ is a critical response of pigmenting melanocytes to combat melanin-induced DNA alterations. Our study illuminates the dark side of melanin and identifies (eu)melanogenesis as a key missing link between tanning response and mutagenesis, mediated via the necessary evil translesion polymerase, Polκ.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1544
Appears in Collections:Immunometabolism Laboratory, Publications

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