A deletion within the murine Werner syndrome helicase induces sensitivity to inhibitors of topoisomerase and loss of cellular proliferative capacity
- *Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, and †Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 200 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115
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Contributed by Philip Leder
Abstract
Werner syndrome (WS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by genomic instability and the premature onset of a number of age-related diseases. The gene responsible for WS encodes a member of the RecQ-like subfamily of DNA helicases. Here we show that its murine homologue maps to murine chromosome 8 in a region syntenic with the human WRN gene. We have deleted a segment of this gene and created Wrn-deficient embryonic stem (ES) cells and WS mice. While displaying reduced embryonic survival, live-born WS mice otherwise appear normal during their first year of life. Nonetheless, although several DNA repair systems are apparently intact in homozygous WS ES cells, such cells display a higher mutation rate and are significantly more sensitive to topoisomerase inhibitors (especially camptothecin) than are wild-type ES cells. Furthermore, mouse embryo fibroblasts derived from homozygous WS embryos show premature loss of proliferative capacity. At the molecular level, wild-type, but not mutant, WS protein copurifies through a series of centrifugation and chromatography steps with a multiprotein DNA replication complex.
Footnotes
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Data deposition: The mouse Wrn mapping data reported in this paper has been deposited in the Mouse Genome Database (accession no. J: 48424).
- ABBREVIATIONS:
- WS,
- Werner syndrome;
- wt,
- wild type;
- RT,
- reverse transcription;
- ES,
- embryonic stem;
- MEFs,
- mouse embryonic fibroblasts;
- HPRT,
- hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase;
- BSS,
- (C57BL/6JEi × SPRET/Ei)F1 × SPRET/Ei;
- BSB,
- (C57BL/6J × M. spretus) F1 × C57BL/6J
- Copyright © 1998, The National Academy of Sciences








