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Dive into the research topics where Weihang Chai is active.

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Featured researches published by Weihang Chai.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Rare missense variants in POT1 predispose to familial cutaneous malignant melanoma

Jianxin Shi; Xiaohong R. Yang; Bari J. Ballew; Melissa Rotunno; Donato Calista; Maria Concetta Fargnoli; Paola Ghiorzo; Brigitte Bressac-de Paillerets; Eduardo Nagore; M.-F. Avril; Neil E. Caporaso; Mary L. McMaster; Michael Cullen; Zhaoming Wang; Xijun Zhang; William Bruno; Lorenza Pastorino; Paola Queirolo; Jose Banuls-Roca; Zaida García-Casado; Amaury Vaysse; Hamida Mohamdi; Yasser Riazalhosseini; Mario Foglio; Fanélie Jouenne; Xing Hua; Paula L. Hyland; Jinhu Yin; Haritha Vallabhaneni; Weihang Chai

Although CDKN2A is the most frequent high-risk melanoma susceptibility gene, the underlying genetic factors for most melanoma-prone families remain unknown. Using whole-exome sequencing, we identified a rare variant that arose as a founder mutation in the telomere shelterin gene POT1 (chromosome 7, g.124493086C>T; p.Ser270Asn) in five unrelated melanoma-prone families from Romagna, Italy. Carriers of this variant had increased telomere lengths and numbers of fragile telomeres, suggesting that this variant perturbs telomere maintenance. Two additional rare POT1 variants were identified in all cases sequenced in two separate Italian families, one variant per family, yielding a frequency for POT1 variants comparable to that for CDKN2A mutations in this population. These variants were not found in public databases or in 2,038 genotyped Italian controls. We also identified two rare recurrent POT1 variants in US and French familial melanoma cases. Our findings suggest that POT1 is a major susceptibility gene for familial melanoma in several populations.


The EMBO Journal | 2012

CTC1 deletion results in defective telomere replication, leading to catastrophic telomere loss and stem cell exhaustion

Peili Gu; Jin-Na Min; Yang Wang; Chenhui Huang; Tao Peng; Weihang Chai; Sandy Chang

The proper maintenance of telomeres is essential for genome stability. Mammalian telomere maintenance is governed by a number of telomere binding proteins, including the newly identified CTC1–STN1–TEN1 (CST) complex. However, the in vivo functions of mammalian CST remain unclear. To address this question, we conditionally deleted CTC1 from mice. We report here that CTC1 null mice experience rapid onset of global cellular proliferative defects and die prematurely from complete bone marrow failure due to the activation of an ATR‐dependent G2/M checkpoint. Acute deletion of CTC1 does not result in telomere deprotection, suggesting that mammalian CST is not involved in capping telomeres. Rather, CTC1 facilitates telomere replication by promoting efficient restart of stalled replication forks. CTC1 deletion results in increased loss of leading C‐strand telomeres, catastrophic telomere loss and accumulation of excessive ss telomere DNA. Our data demonstrate an essential role for CTC1 in promoting efficient replication and length maintenance of telomeres.


The EMBO Journal | 2013

Mammalian DNA2 helicase/nuclease cleaves G‐quadruplex DNA and is required for telomere integrity

Weiqiang Lin; Shilpa Sampathi; Huifang Dai; Changwei Liu; Mian Zhou; Jenny Hu; Qing Huang; Judith L. Campbell; Kazuo Shin-ya; Li Zheng; Weihang Chai; Binghui Shen

Efficient and faithful replication of telomeric DNA is critical for maintaining genome integrity. The G‐quadruplex (G4) structure arising in the repetitive TTAGGG sequence is thought to stall replication forks, impairing efficient telomere replication and leading to telomere instabilities. However, pathways modulating telomeric G4 are poorly understood, and it is unclear whether defects in these pathways contribute to genome instabilities in vivo. Here, we report that mammalian DNA2 helicase/nuclease recognizes and cleaves telomeric G4 in vitro. Consistent with DNA2s role in removing G4, DNA2 deficiency in mouse cells leads to telomere replication defects, elevating the levels of fragile telomeres (FTs) and sister telomere associations (STAs). Such telomere defects are enhanced by stabilizers of G4. Moreover, DNA2 deficiency induces telomere DNA damage and chromosome segregation errors, resulting in tetraploidy and aneuploidy. Consequently, DNA2‐deficient mice develop aneuploidy‐associated cancers containing dysfunctional telomeres. Collectively, our genetic, cytological, and biochemical results suggest that mammalian DNA2 reduces replication stress at telomeres, thereby preserving genome stability and suppressing cancer development, and that this may involve, at least in part, nucleolytic processing of telomeric G4.


Cell Research | 2012

Human Stn1 protects telomere integrity by promoting efficient lagging-strand synthesis at telomeres and mediating C-strand fill-in

Chenhui Huang; Xueyu Dai; Weihang Chai

Telomere maintenance is critical for genome stability. The newly-identified Ctc1/Stn1/Ten1 complex is important for telomere maintenance, though its precise role is unclear. We report here that depletion of hStn1 induces catastrophic telomere shortening, DNA damage response, and early senescence in human somatic cells. These phenotypes are likely due to the essential role of hStn1 in promoting efficient replication of lagging-strand telomeric DNA. Downregulation of hStn1 accumulates single-stranded G-rich DNA specifically at lagging-strand telomeres, increases telomere fragility, hinders telomere DNA synthesis, as well as delays and compromises telomeric C-strand synthesis. We further show that hStn1 deficiency leads to persistent and elevated association of DNA polymerase α (polα) to telomeres, suggesting that hStn1 may modulate the DNA synthesis activity of polα rather than controlling the loading of polα to telomeres. Additionally, our data suggest that hStn1 is unlikely to be part of the telomere capping complex. We propose that the hStn1 assists DNA polymerases to efficiently duplicate lagging-strand telomeres in order to achieve complete synthesis of telomeric DNA, therefore preventing rapid telomere loss.


The EMBO Journal | 2010

Molecular steps of G-overhang generation at human telomeres and its function in chromosome end protection

Xueyu Dai; Chenhui Huang; Amruta Bhusari; Shilpa Sampathi; Kathryn Schubert; Weihang Chai

Telomeric G‐overhangs are required for the formation of the protective telomere structure and telomerase action. However, the mechanism controlling G‐overhang generation at human telomeres is poorly understood. Here, we show that G‐overhangs can undergo cell cycle‐regulated changes independent of telomerase activity. G‐overhangs at lagging telomeres are lengthened in S phase and then shortened in late S/G2 because of C‐strand fill‐in, whereas the sizes of G‐overhangs at leading telomeres remain stable throughout S phase and are lengthened in G2/M. The final nucleotides at measurable C‐strands are precisely defined throughout the cell cycle, indicating that C‐strand resection is strictly regulated. We demonstrate that C‐strand fill‐in is mediated by DNA polymerase α (polα) and controlled by cyclin‐dependent kinase 1 (CDK1). Inhibition of CDK1 leads to accumulation of lengthened G‐overhangs and induces telomeric DNA damage response. Furthermore, depletion of hStn1 results in elongation of G‐overhangs and an increase in telomeric DNA damage. Our results suggest that G‐overhang generation at human telomeres is regulated by multiple tightly controlled processes and C‐strand fill‐in is under the control of polα and CDK1.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Human Flap Endonuclease I Is in Complex with Telomerase and Is Required for Telomerase-mediated Telomere Maintenance

Shilpa Sampathi; Amruta Bhusari; Binghui Shen; Weihang Chai

Studies from budding yeast and ciliates have suggested that telomerase extension of telomeres requires the conventional DNA replication machinery, yet little is known about how DNA replication proteins regulate telomerase action in higher eukaryotic cells. Here we investigate the role of one of the DNA replication factors, flap endonuclease I (FEN1), in regulating telomerase activity in mammalian cells. FEN1 is a nuclease that plays an important role in DNA replication, repair, and recombination. We show that FEN1 is in complex with telomerase in vivo via telomeric DNA. We further demonstrate that FEN1 deficiency in mouse embryonic fibroblasts leads to an increase in telomere end-to-end fusions. In cancer cells, FEN1 deficiency induces gradual shortening of telomeres but does not alter the single-stranded G-overhangs. This is, to our knowledge, the first evidence that FEN1 and telomerase physically co-exist as a complex and that FEN1 can regulate telomerase activity at telomeres in mammalian cells.


Oncogene | 2015

The FEN1 E359K germline mutation disrupts the FEN1–WRN interaction and FEN1 GEN activity, causing aneuploidy-associated cancers

Lin Chung; David Onyango; Zhigang Guo; Pingping Jia; Huifang Dai; Songbai Liu; Mian Zhou; Weiqiang Lin; Insun Pang; Hongzhi Li; Yate-Ching Yuan; Qin Huang; Li Zheng; Judith Lopes; Alain Nicolas; Weihang Chai; Dan J. Raz; Karen L. Reckamp; Binghui Shen

Polymorphisms and somatic mutations in Flap Endonuclease 1 (FEN1), an essential enzyme involved in DNA replication and repair, can lead to functional deficiencies of the FEN1 protein and a predisposition to cancer. We identified a FEN1 germline mutation that changed residue E359 to K in a patient whose family had a history of breast cancer. We determined that the E359K mutation, which is in the protein–protein domain of FEN1, abolished the interaction of FEN1 with Werner syndrome protein (WRN), an interaction that is critical for resolving stalled DNA replication forks. Furthermore, although the flap endonuclease activity of FEN1 E359K was unaffected, it failed to resolve bubble structures, which require the FEN1 gap-dependent endonuclease activity. To determine the etiological significance of E359K, we established a mouse model containing this mutation. E359K mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEF) were more sensitive to DNA crosslinking agents that cause replication forks to stall. Cytological analysis suggested that the FEN1–WRN interaction was also required for telomere stability; mutant cell lines had fragile telomeres, increased numbers of spontaneous chromosomal anomalies and higher frequencies of transformation. Moreover, the incidence of cancer was significantly higher in mice homozygous for FEN1 E359K than in wild-type mice, suggesting that the FEN1 E359K mutation is oncogenic.


Cell Reports | 2016

Human CST Facilitates Genome-wide RAD51 Recruitment to GC-Rich Repetitive Sequences in Response to Replication Stress

Megan Chastain; Qing Zhou; Olga Shiva; Maria Fadri-Moskwik; Leanne Whitmore; Pingping Jia; Xueyu Dai; Chenhui Huang; Ping Ye; Weihang Chai

The telomeric CTC1/STN1/TEN1 (CST) complex has been implicated in promoting replication recovery under replication stress at genomic regions, yet its precise role is unclear. Here, we report that STN1 is enriched at GC-rich repetitive sequences genome-wide in response to hydroxyurea (HU)-induced replication stress. STN1 deficiency exacerbates the fragility of these sequences under replication stress, resulting in chromosome fragmentation. We find that upon fork stalling, CST proteins form distinct nuclear foci that colocalize with RAD51. Furthermore, replication stress induces physical association of CST with RAD51 in an ATR-dependent manner. Strikingly, CST deficiency diminishes HU-induced RAD51 foci formation and reduces RAD51 recruitment to telomeres and non-telomeric GC-rich fragile sequences. Collectively, our findings establish that CST promotes RAD51 recruitment to GC-rich repetitive sequences in response to replication stress to facilitate replication restart, thereby providing insights into the mechanism underlying genome stability maintenance.


Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2011

Telomere replication: poised but puzzling

Shilpa Sampathi; Weihang Chai

•  Introduction ‐  Telomeres, telomerase and their roles in genome stability ‐  Telomere DNA replication: not a cake walk for the replication fork •  Functions of replication proteins in telomere maintenance ‐  DNA polymerase a‐primase (pola/primase) ‐  Replication protein A ‐  RecQ helicases ‐  Flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1) ‐  Dna2 •  Functions of telomere binding proteins in telomere replication ‐  TRF1 ‐  TRF2 ‐  Apollo ‐  POT1 •  The delayed telomeric C‐strand synthesis at late S/G2 phase – an additional regulatory step of telomere maintenance ‐  The CST complex •  Conclusions and perspectives


DNA Repair | 2015

DNA excision repair at telomeres.

Pingping Jia; Chengtao Her; Weihang Chai

DNA damage is caused by either endogenous cellular metabolic processes such as hydrolysis, oxidation, alkylation, and DNA base mismatches, or exogenous sources including ultraviolet (UV) light, ionizing radiation, and chemical agents. Damaged DNA that is not properly repaired can lead to genomic instability, driving tumorigenesis. To protect genomic stability, mammalian cells have evolved highly conserved DNA repair mechanisms to remove and repair DNA lesions. Telomeres are composed of long tandem TTAGGG repeats located at the ends of chromosomes. Maintenance of functional telomeres is critical for preventing genome instability. The telomeric sequence possesses unique features that predispose telomeres to a variety of DNA damage induced by environmental genotoxins. This review briefly describes the relevance of excision repair pathways in telomere maintenance, with the focus on base excision repair (BER), nucleotide excision repair (NER), and mismatch repair (MMR). By summarizing current knowledge on excision repair of telomere damage and outlining many unanswered questions, it is our hope to stimulate further interest in a better understanding of excision repair processes at telomeres and in how these processes contribute to telomere maintenance.

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Chenhui Huang

Washington State University

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Shilpa Sampathi

Washington State University

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Binghui Shen

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Pingping Jia

Washington State University Spokane

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Xueyu Dai

Washington State University Spokane

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Amruta Bhusari

Texas Woman's University

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Chengtao Her

Washington State University

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Li Zheng

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Megan Chastain

Washington State University

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Qing Zhou

Washington State University Spokane

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