Islamabad, Jan 26 :
They are the Robinson Crusoes of the intracellular world -- lone chromosomes,
whole and hardy, stranded outside the nucleus where their fellow chromosomes
reside. Such castaways, each confined to its own "micronucleus," are often found
in cancer cells, but scientists haven't known what role, if any, they play in
the cancer process.
In a paper published by the journal Nature,
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute researchers have mapped out a mechanism by which
micronuclei could potentially disrupt the chromosomes within them and produce
cancer-causing gene mutations. The findings may point to a vulnerability in
cancer cells that could be attacked by new therapies.
"The most common
genetic change in cancer is the presence of an incorrect number of intact
chromosomes within cancer cells -- a condition known as aneuploidy," says
Dana-Farber's David Pellman, MD, the study's senior author. "The significance of
aneuploidy has been hard to pin down, however, because little is known about how
it might trigger tumors. In contrast, the mechanism by which DNA damage and
broken chromosomes cause cancer is well established -- by altering cancer genes
in a way that spurs runaway cell division.
"The new study demonstrates
one possible chain of events by which aneuploidy and specifically 'exiled'
chromosomes could lead to cancer-causing mutations, with potential implications
for cancer prevention and treatment," says Pellman, who is a Howard Hughes
Medical Institute investigator and the Margaret M. Dyson Professor of Pediatric
Oncology at Dana-Farber, Children's Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical
School.
Whole chromosomes can end up outside the nucleus as a result of a
glitch in cell division. In normal division, a cell duplicates its chromosomes
and dispatches them to the newly forming daughter cells: the original set to one
daughter, the twin set to the other. For a variety of reasons, the chromosomes
sometimes aren't allocated evenly -- one daughter receives an extra one, the
other is short one. Unlike the rest of the chromosomes, these stragglers
sometimes don't make it to the nucleus. Instead, they're marooned elsewhere
within the cell and become wrapped in their own membrane, forming a
micronucleus.
"In some respects, micronuclei are similar to primary
nuclei," Pellman remarks, "but much about their function and composition is
unknown. Previous studies differ on whether micronuclei replicate or repair
their chromosomes as normal nuclei do. The ultimate fate of these chromosomes is
unclear as well: Are they passed on to daughter cells during cell division or
are they somehow eliminated as division proceeds?"
One clue that
odd-man-out chromosomes themselves may be subject to damage -- and therefore be
involved in cancer -- emerged from Pellman's previous research into aneuploidy.
"We found that cancer cells generated from cells with micronuclei also have a
great deal of chromosome breakage," Pellman explains. But researchers didn't
know if this was a sign of connection or of coincidence.
Another clue
came from a recently discovered phenomenon called "chromothripsis," in which one
chromosome of a cancer cell shows massive amounts of breakage and rearrangement,
while the remainder of the genome is largely intact. "That finding leapt off the
page of these studies -- that such extensive damage could be limited to a single
chromosome or single arm of a chromosome," Pellman says. "We wondered if the
physical isolation of chromosomes in micronuclei could explain this kind of
highly localized chromosome damage."
To find out, Karen Crasta, PhD, of
Pellman's lab and the study's lead author, used a confocal microscope to observe
dividing cells with micronuclei. She found that while micronuclei do form
duplicate copies of their chromosomes, the process is bungled in two respects.
First, it is inefficient: part of the chromosome is replicated and part isn't,
leading to chromosome damage. Second, it is out of sync: the micronucleus keeps
trying to replicate its chromosomes long after replication of the other
chromosomes was completed. For cell division to be successful, every step of the
process must occur in the proper order, at the proper time. In fact, when study
co-author Regina Dagher directly analyzed the structure of the late-replicating
chromosomes, she found them to be smashed to bits -- exactly what was predicted
as the first step in chromothripsis.
The final piece of the puzzle came
when Pellman's colleague Neil Ganem, PhD, examined what happens to these
pulverized fragments, using an imaging trick that marked the chromosome in the
micronucleus with its own color.
"It has been theorized that micronuclei
are garbage disposals for chromosomes that the cell doesn't need anymore,"
Pellman comments. "If that were true, the smashed pieces would be discarded or
digested, but we found that, a third of the time, they're donated to one of the
daughter cells and therefore cold be incorporated into that cell's
genome.
Pellman says that the findings suggest that, unexpectedly, whole
chromosome aneuploidy might promote cancer in a very similar way to other kinds
of genomic alterations. The key event may be mutations in oncogenes and tumor
suppressors. This mechanism may also explain how cancer cells acquire more than
one such mutation at a time.
"Although chromothripsis occurs in only a
few percent of human cancers, our findings suggest that it might be an extreme
instance of a kind of chromosome damage that could be much more common," says
Pellman, who adds that accelerating this process in cancer cells, thus
generating so many mutations that the cells die, may represent a possible
strategy for new therapies against certain
tumors.
Ends
SA/EN
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'Pulverized' chromosomes linked to cancer?
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