The proteomic landscape of genotoxic stress-induced micronuclei

Mol Cell. 2024 Apr 4;84(7):1377-1391.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.molcel.2024.02.001. Epub 2024 Feb 28.

Abstract

Micronuclei (MN) are induced by various genotoxic stressors and amass nuclear- and cytoplasmic-resident proteins, priming the cell for MN-driven signaling cascades. Here, we measured the proteome of micronuclear, cytoplasmic, and nuclear fractions from human cells exposed to a panel of six genotoxins, comprehensively profiling their MN protein landscape. We find that MN assemble a proteome distinct from both surrounding cytoplasm and parental nuclei, depleted of spliceosome and DNA damage repair components while enriched for a subset of the replisome. We show that the depletion of splicing machinery within transcriptionally active MN contributes to intra-MN DNA damage, a known precursor to chromothripsis. The presence of transcription machinery in MN is stress-dependent, causing a contextual induction of MN DNA damage through spliceosome deficiency. This dataset represents a unique resource detailing the global proteome of MN, guiding mechanistic studies of MN generation and MN-associated outcomes of genotoxic stress.

Keywords: DNA damage; chromothripsis; genotoxin; mass spectrometry; micronuclei; mitotic errors; proteomics; radiation; spliceosome.

MeSH terms

  • Cell Nucleus / genetics
  • Cell Nucleus / metabolism
  • Chromothripsis*
  • DNA Damage / genetics
  • Humans
  • Proteome* / genetics
  • Proteome* / metabolism
  • Proteomics

Substances

  • Proteome