A small molecule inhibitor Mirin prevents TOP3A-dependent mtDNA breakage and segregation

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Abstract

Mirin, the chemical inhibitor of MRE11, has been recently reported to prevent immune response activation caused by mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) breakage and release upon replication stalling. We show here that Mirin prevents mitochondrial replication fork breakage in mitochondrial 3’-exonuclease MGME1 deficient cells and the resulting innate immune response induction, but that this occurs independently of MRE11. Furthermore, Mirin also caused alteration of mtDNA supercoiling and accumulation of hemicatenated replication termination intermediates, hallmarks of topoisomerase dysfunction, as well as alleviated topological changes induced by the overexpression of mitochondrial TOP3A, including TOP3A-dependent strand breakage at the non-coding region of mtDNA, potentially explaining its protective effect in the MGME1-knockout cells. Although Mirin does not inhibit TOP3A in vitro , our results demonstrate its MRE11-independent effects in cells and give insight into the mechanisms of mtDNA segregation, as well as the maintenance of genomic integrity in mitochondria.

Significance Statement

  • Broken mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in MGME1 knockout cells activates innate immune response, which is prevented by Mirin, a small molecule inhibitor of MRE11.

  • Mirin also interferes with mtDNA replication termination and segregation, suggesting that termination intermediates or paused forks are a major source of mtDNA breakage.

  • We show that these effects are likely dependent on topoisomerase 3A (TOP3A) -related processes in mitochondria, questioning the Mirin target also in the nucleus.

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