MOS, aneuploidy and the ploidy cycle of cancer cells

被引:54
作者
Erenpreisa, J. [1 ]
Cragg, M. S. [2 ]
机构
[1] Latvian Biomed Res & Study Ctr, LV-1067 Riga, Latvia
[2] Univ Southampton, Sch Med, Gen Hosp, Tenovus Lab,Canc Sci Div, Southampton SO16 6YD, Hants, England
关键词
polyploidy; MOS; aneuploidy; DNA damage; tumor resistance; life cycle; MEIOSIS-SPECIFIC GENES; VIDEO TIME-LAPSE; MITOTIC CATASTROPHE; GIANT-CELLS; CHROMOSOME SEGREGATION; TUMOR-CELLS; C-MOS; UP-REGULATION; SELF-RENEWAL; POLYPLOIDY;
D O I
10.1038/onc.2010.310
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
After DNA or spindle damage, p53-defective tumor cells undergo a complex cycle of reversible polyploidy. How this process occurs and more importantly, why, has recently become the focus of several research groups, prompting this review in which we discuss two related phenomena that accompany the reversible polyploidy of tumor cells: the induction of meiosis genes such as MOS and the decrease in genomic instability observed during the reversion from polyploidy to para-diploidy. The reversible polyploidy likely provides the means through which the balance between increased chromosome instability (CIN), driving genetic variation and decreased CIN, necessary for perpetuating these malignant clones, is maintained. These concepts are integrated with recent findings that many meiotic and self-renewal genes become activated during reversible polyploidy and lead us to the hypothesis that tumor cell immortality may be achieved through germline-like transmission. Oncogene (2010) 29, 5447-5451; doi:10.1038/onc.2010.310; published online 2 August 2010
引用
收藏
页码:5447 / 5451
页数:5
相关论文
共 66 条
[1]   Genetic instability and darwinian selection in tumours (Reprinted from Trends in Biochemical Science, vol 12, Dec., 1999) [J].
Cahill, DP ;
Kinzler, KW ;
Vogelstein, B ;
Lengauer, C .
TRENDS IN CELL BIOLOGY, 1999, 9 (12) :M57-M60
[2]   Cell death by mitotic catastrophe: a molecular definition [J].
Castedo, M ;
Perfettini, JL ;
Roumie, T ;
Andreau, K ;
Medema, R ;
Kroemer, G .
ONCOGENE, 2004, 23 (16) :2825-2837
[3]   Apoptosis regulation in tetraploid cancer cells [J].
Castedo, Maria ;
Coquelle, Arnaud ;
Vivet, Sonia ;
Vitale, Ilio ;
Kauffmann, Audrey ;
Dessen, Philippe ;
Pequignot, Marie O. ;
Casares, Noelia ;
Valent, Alexandre ;
Mouhamad, Shahul ;
Schmitt, Elise ;
Modjtahedi, Nazanine ;
Vainchenker, William ;
Zitvogel, Laurence ;
Lazar, Vladimir ;
Garrido, Carmen ;
Kroemer, Guido .
EMBO JOURNAL, 2006, 25 (11) :2584-2595
[4]   A little CIN may cost a lot: revisiting aneuploidy and cancer [J].
Chandhok, Namrata S. ;
Pellman, David .
CURRENT OPINION IN GENETICS & DEVELOPMENT, 2009, 19 (01) :74-81
[5]   Mos/mitogen-activated protein kinase can induce early meiotic phenotypes in the absence of maturation-promoting factor: A novel system for analyzing spindle formation during meiosis I [J].
Choi, T ;
Rulong, S ;
Resau, J ;
Fukasawa, K ;
Matten, W ;
Kuriyama, R ;
Mansour, S ;
Ahn, N ;
VandeWoude, GF .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1996, 93 (10) :4730-4735
[6]   Computerized video time lapse study of cell cycle delay and arrest, mitotic catastrophe, apoptosis and clonogenic survival in irradiated 14-3-3σ and CDKN1A (p21) knockout cell lines [J].
Chu, K ;
Teele, N ;
Dewey, MW ;
Albright, N ;
Dewey, WC .
RADIATION RESEARCH, 2004, 162 (03) :270-286
[7]   THE ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF MEIOSIS [J].
CLEVELAND, LR .
SCIENCE, 1947, 105 (2724) :287-289
[8]  
DELAHOZ C, 1993, J CELL SCI, V104, P31
[9]  
Duesberg P, 2006, CONTRIB MICROBIOL, V13, P16, DOI 10.1159/000092963
[10]   Mitotic catastrophe and endomitosis in tumour cells: An evolutionary key to a molecular solution [J].
Erenpreisa, J ;
Kalejs, M ;
Cragg, MS .
CELL BIOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2005, 29 (12) :1012-1018