- Zhang, Xiaowen;
- Chiang, Huai-Chin;
- Wang, Yao;
- Zhang, Chi;
- Smith, Sabrina;
- Zhao, Xiayan;
- Nair, Sreejith J;
- Michalek, Joel;
- Jatoi, Ismail;
- Lautner, Meeghan;
- Oliver, Boyce;
- Wang, Howard;
- Petit, Anna;
- Soler, Teresa;
- Brunet, Joan;
- Mateo, Francesca;
- Angel Pujana, Miguel;
- Poggi, Elizabeth;
- Chaldekas, Krysta;
- Isaacs, Claudine;
- Peshkin, Beth N;
- Ochoa, Oscar;
- Chedin, Frederic;
- Theoharis, Constantine;
- Sun, Lu-Zhe;
- Curiel, Tyler J;
- Elledge, Richard;
- Jin, Victor X;
- Hu, Yanfen;
- Li, Rong
Most BRCA1-associated breast tumours are basal-like yet originate from luminal progenitors. BRCA1 is best known for its functions in double-strand break repair and resolution of DNA replication stress. However, it is unclear whether loss of these ubiquitously important functions fully explains the cell lineage-specific tumorigenesis. In vitro studies implicate BRCA1 in elimination of R-loops, DNA-RNA hybrid structures involved in transcription and genetic instability. Here we show that R-loops accumulate preferentially in breast luminal epithelial cells, not in basal epithelial or stromal cells, of BRCA1 mutation carriers. Furthermore, R-loops are enriched at the 5' end of those genes with promoter-proximal RNA polymerase II (Pol II) pausing. Genetic ablation of Cobra1, which encodes a Pol II-pausing and BRCA1-binding protein, ameliorates R-loop accumulation and reduces tumorigenesis in Brca1-knockout mouse mammary epithelium. Our studies show that Pol II pausing is an important contributor to BRCA1-associated R-loop accumulation and breast cancer development.