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ATR Safeguards Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition by Countering R-loops and Enabling Transcription Reprogramming.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Patel, PS; Matson, JP; Ran, X; Stanzione, M; Kawale, AS; Wang, M; Saxena, S; Sander, C; Curtis, J; Hopkins, JL; Wong, E; Corcoran, RB; Zou, L ...
Published in: J Clin Invest
January 22, 2026

Transitions of cancer cells between distinct cell states, which are typically driven by transcription reprogramming, fuel tumor plasticity, metastasis, and therapeutic resistance. Whether the transitions between cell states can be therapeutically targeted remains unknown. Here, using the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) as a model, we show that the transcription reprogramming during a cell-state transition induces genomic instability through R-loops and transcription-replication conflicts, and the cell-state transition cannot occur without the ATR kinase, a key regulator of the replication stress response. ATR inhibition during EMT not only increases transcription- and replication-dependent genomic instability but also disrupts transcription reprogramming. Unexpectedly, ATR inhibition elevates R-loop-associated DNA damage at the SNAI1 gene, a key driver of the transcription reprogramming during EMT, triggering ATM- and Polycomb-mediated transcription repression of SNAI1. Beyond SNAI1, ATR also suppresses R-loops and antagonizes repressive chromatin at a subset of EMT genes. Importantly, inhibition of ATR in tumors undergoing EMT reduces tumor growth and metastasis, suggesting that ATR inhibition eliminates cancer cells in transition. Thus, during EMT, ATR not only protects genome integrity but also enables transcription reprogramming, revealing that ATR is a safeguard of cell-state transitions and a target to suppress tumor plasticity.

Duke Scholars

Published In

J Clin Invest

DOI

EISSN

1558-8238

Publication Date

January 22, 2026

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Immunology
  • 42 Health sciences
  • 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
  • 31 Biological sciences
 

Citation

APA
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Patel, P. S., Matson, J. P., Ran, X., Stanzione, M., Kawale, A. S., Wang, M., … Zou, L. (2026). ATR Safeguards Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition by Countering R-loops and Enabling Transcription Reprogramming. J Clin Invest. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI192225
Patel, Parasvi S., Jacob P. Matson, Xiaojuan Ran, Marcello Stanzione, Ajinkya S. Kawale, Mingchao Wang, Sneha Saxena, et al. “ATR Safeguards Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition by Countering R-loops and Enabling Transcription Reprogramming.J Clin Invest, January 22, 2026. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI192225.
Patel PS, Matson JP, Ran X, Stanzione M, Kawale AS, Wang M, et al. ATR Safeguards Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition by Countering R-loops and Enabling Transcription Reprogramming. J Clin Invest. 2026 Jan 22;
Patel, Parasvi S., et al. “ATR Safeguards Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition by Countering R-loops and Enabling Transcription Reprogramming.J Clin Invest, Jan. 2026. Pubmed, doi:10.1172/JCI192225.
Patel PS, Matson JP, Ran X, Stanzione M, Kawale AS, Wang M, Saxena S, Sander C, Curtis J, Hopkins JL, Wong E, Corcoran RB, Haber DA, Dyson NJ, Maheswaran S, Zou L. ATR Safeguards Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition by Countering R-loops and Enabling Transcription Reprogramming. J Clin Invest. 2026 Jan 22;

Published In

J Clin Invest

DOI

EISSN

1558-8238

Publication Date

January 22, 2026

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Immunology
  • 42 Health sciences
  • 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
  • 31 Biological sciences