Transcription-Coupled Repair as a Mutagenic Mechanism During Replication Stress

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Replication stress (RS) is a primary driver of genomic instability in cancer, yet the contribution of transcription-coupled repair to this process remains poorly understood. Here, we investigate how the TC-NER factor ERCC6 (CSB) shapes mutational landscapes under RS. We demonstrate that ERCC6 deficiency impairs replication restart and biases early damage signaling toward a 53BP1-mediated response, ultimately leading to senescence. Conversely, ERCC6-proficient cells prioritize survival and proliferative recovery but at the cost of distinct genomic alterations. Whole-exome sequencing reveals that ERCC6 drives the retention of stress-induced mutations specifically within coding regions of transcriptionally active loci, whereas ERCC6-deficient cells accumulate variants primarily in intergenic regions. These findings uncover a survival-mutagenesis trade-off: ERCC6 safeguards transcriptional continuity during replication stress but promotes mutational burdens in functional genomes. This mechanism parallels bacterial adaptive mutagenesis, identifying ERCC6 as a context-dependent driver of somatic evolution and tumor heterogeneity.

Article activity feed