scholarly journals Cell-cycle Alterations in Post-mitotic Cells and Cell Death by Mitotic Catastrophe

Author(s):  
Duccio Lombardi ◽  
Laura Lasagni
2011 ◽  
Vol 1813 (3) ◽  
pp. 492-499 ◽  
Author(s):  
António Pedro Gonçalves ◽  
Valdemar Máximo ◽  
Jorge Lima ◽  
Keshav K. Singh ◽  
Paula Soares ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chaska C Walton ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Iris Patiño-Parrado ◽  
Estíbaliz Barrio-Alonso ◽  
Juan-José Garrido ◽  
...  

SUMMARYMitotic activity associated to neuron cell-death instead of cell-division is reported in neurodegenerative diseases. However, why mitotic activity can take place in supposedly postmitotic neurons and how it is associated to cell-death remains largely unexplained. To address these questions, we have studied the response of primary neurons to oncogenic deregulation using a fusion protein based on truncated Cyclin E and Cdk2. Oncogenic Cyclin E/Cdk2 elicits mitotic checkpoint signaling, resulting in cell-cycle arrest and cell-death. However, as in mitotic cells, checkpoint suppression enables oncogenic cell-cycle progression and neuronal division. Further, neurons actively adapt to the cell-cycle by losing and reforming the axon initial segment, which integrates synaptic inputs to sustain action potentials. We conclude that neurons are mitotic cells in a reversible quiescent-like state, which is falsely portrayed as irreversible by mitotic checkpoints. In extension, neuronal death in lieu of cell-division reflects oncosuppressive checkpoint signaling.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajkishor Nishad ◽  
Dhanunjay Mukhi ◽  
Ashish Kumar Singh ◽  
Kumaraswami Chintala ◽  
Prasad Tammineni ◽  
...  

AbstractPodocytes are integral members of the filtration barrier in the kidney and are crucial for glomerular permselectivity. Podocytes are highly differentiated and vulnerable to an array of noxious stimuli during various clinical conditions whereas podocyte loss plays a key role in progressive glomerular diseases. Elevated circulating growth hormone (GH) levels are associated with podocyte injury and proteinuria in diabetics. Previous studies have shown that podocytes express GH receptors (GHR), and induce Notch signaling when exposed to GH. However, the precise mechanism(s) by which excess GH elicits podocytopathy remains to be elucidated. In the present study, we demonstrate that GH induces cognate TGF-β1 signaling and provokes cell cycle re-entry of otherwise quiescent podocytes. Though, differentiated podocytes re-enter the cell cycle in response to GH and TGF-β1 unable to accomplish cytokinesis, despite nuclear division. Owing to this aberrant cell-cycle events significant amount of GH or TGF-β1 treated cells remain binucleated and undergo mitotic catastrophe. Importantly, inhibition of GHR, TGFBR1, or Notch signaling prevented cell cycle re-entry and protects podocyte from cell death. Furthermore, inhibition of Notch activation prevents GH-dependent podocyte injury and proteinuria. Kidney biopsy sections from patients with diabetic nephropathy show activation of Notch signaling and bi-nucleated podocytes. All these data confirm that excess GH induces Notch1 signaling via TGF-β1 and contributes to the mitotic catastrophe of podocytes. This study highlights the role of aberrant GH signaling in the podocytopathy and the potential application of inhibitors of TGF-β1 or Notch inhibitors as a therapeutic agent for diabetic nephropathy.Significance StatementElevated circulating levels of growth hormone (GH) associated with glomerular hypertrophy and proteinuria. Whereas decreased GH action protected against proteinuria. Podocytes are highly differentiated cells that play a vital role in glomerular filtration and curb protein loss. The direct role of GH in podocytes is the focus of our study. We found that GH induces TGF-β1 and both provoke cell cycle re-entry of podocytes in Notch1 dependent manner. Notch activation enables the podocytes to accomplish karyokinesis, but not cytokinesis owing to which podocytes remain binucleated. Binucleated podocytes that were observed during GH/TGF-β1 treatment are susceptible to cell death. Our study highlighted the fact that enforcing the differentiated podocytes to re-enter the cell cycle results in mitotic catastrophe and permanent loss.


1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 199-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil Chernoff ◽  
John M. Rogers ◽  
Ajit J. Alles ◽  
Robert M. Zucker ◽  
Kenneth H. Elstein ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Pragathi Masamsetti ◽  
Ronnie Ren Jie Low ◽  
Ka Sin Mak ◽  
Aisling O’Connor ◽  
Chris D. Riffkin ◽  
...  

Abstract Mitotic catastrophe is a broad descriptor encompassing unclear mechanisms of cell death. Here we investigate replication stress-driven mitotic catastrophe in human cells and identify that replication stress principally induces mitotic death signalled through two independent pathways. In p53-compromised cells we find that lethal replication stress confers WAPL-dependent centromere cohesion defects that maintain spindle assembly checkpoint-dependent mitotic arrest in the same cell cycle. Mitotic arrest then drives cohesion fatigue and triggers mitotic death through a primary pathway of BAX/BAK-dependent apoptosis. Simultaneously, a secondary mitotic death pathway is engaged through non-canonical telomere deprotection, regulated by TRF2, Aurora B and ATM. Additionally, we find that suppressing mitotic death in replication stressed cells results in distinct cellular outcomes depending upon how cell death is averted. These data demonstrate how replication stress-induced mitotic catastrophe signals cell death with implications for cancer treatment and cancer genome evolution.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Pragathi Masamsetti ◽  
Ka Sin Mak ◽  
Ronnie Ren Jie Low ◽  
Chris D. Riffkin ◽  
Noa Lamm ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTMitotic catastrophe is a broad descriptor encompassing unclear mechanisms of cell death. Here we investigate replication stress-driven mitotic catastrophe in human cells and identify that replication stress principally induces mitotic death signalled through two independent pathways. In p53-compromised cells we find that lethal replication stress confers WAPL-dependent centromere cohesion defects that maintain spindle assembly checkpoint-dependent mitotic arrest in the same cell cycle. Mitotic arrest then drives cohesion fatigue and triggers mitotic death through a primary pathway of BAX/BAK-dependent apoptosis. Simultaneously, a secondary mitotic death pathway is engaged through non-canonical telomere deprotection, regulated by TRF2, Aurora B and ATM. Additionally, we find that suppressing mitotic death promotes genome instability in replication stressed cells through diverse mechanisms depending upon how cell death is averted. These data demonstrate how replication stress-induced mitotic catastrophe signals cell death with implications for cancer treatment and genome instability.


2011 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 675-684 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rostyslav Horbay ◽  
Rostyslav Stoika

AbstractThe study of giant cells in populations of different tumor cells and evaluation of their role in cancer development is an expanding field. The formation of giant cells has been shown to be followed by mitotic catastrophe, apoptosis, necrosis, and other types of cell elimination. Reports also demonstrate that giant cells can escape cell death and give rise to new cancer cells. However, it is not known if the programmed cell death is involved in this type of cell cycle disorders. Here we describe principal events that are observed during giant cell formation. We also consider the role of giant cells in cancer development, taking into account both published work and our own recent data in this field.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Ning Li ◽  
Pingde Zhang ◽  
Karrie Mei Yee Kiang ◽  
Yin Stephen Cheng ◽  
Gilberto Ka Kit Leung

Temozolomide (TMZ) is the first-line chemotherapeutic agent in the treatment of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Despite its cytotoxic effect, TMZ also induces cell cycle arrest that may lead to the development of chemoresistance and eventual tumor recurrence. Caffeine, a widely consumed neurostimulant, shows anticancer activities and is reported to work synergistically with cisplatin and camptothecin. The present study aimed to investigate the effects and the mechanisms of action of caffeine used in combination with TMZ in U87-MG GBM cells. As anticipated, TMZ caused DNA damage mediated by the ATM/p53/p21 signaling pathway and induced significant G2 delay. Concurrent treatment with caffeine repressed proliferation and lowered clonogenic capacity on MTT and colony formation assays, respectively. Mechanistic study showed that coadministration of caffeine and TMZ suppressed the phosphorylation of ATM and p53 and downregulated p21 expression, thus releasing DNA-damaged cells from G2 arrest into premature mitosis. Cell cycle analysis demonstrated that the proportion of cells arrested in G2 phase decreased when caffeine was administered together with TMZ; at the same time, the amount of cells with micronucleation and multipolar spindle poles increased, indicative of enhanced mitotic cell death. Pretreatment of cells with caffeine further enhanced mitotic catastrophe development in combined treatment and sensitized cells to apoptosis when followed by TMZ alone. In conclusion, our study demonstrated that caffeine enhanced the efficacy of TMZ through mitotic cell death by impeding ATM/p53/p21-mediated G2 arrest.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 5157-5157
Author(s):  
Choon Kee Lee ◽  
Shuiliang Wang ◽  
Xiaoping Huang ◽  
John Ryder ◽  
Peter Ordentlich ◽  
...  

Abstract One of the main mechanisms of action of HDAC inhibitors is the transcriptional reactivation of dormant tumor-suppressor genes through acetylation of histones, thereby inducing apoptosis. Treatment with HDACI has also been shown to induce chromatin destabilization in a transcription independent way. In the current study, we sought to determine whether HDAC inhibition induces DNA damage and amplifies alkylator-induced mitotic cell death in both melphalan sensitive- and resistant-MM cell lines (RPMI8226, 8226/LR5). The IC50 values of SNDX275, a class I HDACI agent, and melphalan on the 72-hour MTT assay were 268.05 nM and 245.94 nM in the RPMI8226, and 309.91 nM and 8657.46 nM in the 8226/LR5, respectively. When combined together at clinically attainable concentrations, the combination index by the Chou-Talalay method ranged from 0.27 to 0.75 for the RPMI8226 and from 0.33 to 0.7 for the 8226/LR5, indicating a powerful synergism. For elucidation of molecular mechanisms, MM1S and RPMI8226 cell lines were investigated for apoptosis, histone acetylation, cell cycle analysis, DNA double strand break and DNA damage response serially in 48-hour culture with SNDX-275 at 500 nM and melphalan at 10 μM, alone and in combination. Cleavage of PARP was seen following treatment with each SNDX275 and melphalan, but was highest at 48 hours with the combination of both. Apoptosis was associated with cleavage of caspases of 8, 3 and 9, which was most intense on combination. Melphalan amplified SNDX275-induced acetylation of H3. In cell cycle analysis by flow cytometry, SNDX275 caused an increase in G0-G1 and a decrease in S and G2-M. Cyclin D1, E2F-1 and p53 on western blot were not affected but expression of p21 increased. Melphalan arrested the cell cycle at G2, increased expression of p53 in the RPMI8226 and of p21 in the MM1S. The combination intensified the increase in p21 in both cell lines and in p53 only in the RPMI8226. Phosphorylation of H2AX, a marker of DNA double strand break, increased in a time dependent manner following each drug, along with an increase in phosphorylation of CHK1 and CHK2, indicative of initiation of DNA damage response. The increase in γH2AX and pCHK1 & 2, however, was considerably higher on combination than each drug alone. Furthermore, morphologic assessment of dead cells by the 48 hours of culture revealed a significant increase in mitotic catastrophe on combination in the MM1S: 0% on SNDX275 alone; 10% on melphalan alone; 43.4% on combination. The current study suggests that HDAC inhibition synergizes with melphalan in MM cells and that intensification of DNA damage is one of the mechanisms. Further studies are necessary to understand the role of HDAC inhibition for induction of mitotic catastrophe.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document