| Literature DB >> 20548097 |
Larissa Lordier1, Yunhua Chang, Abdelali Jalil, Frédéric Aurade, Loïc Garçon, Yann Lécluse, Frédéric Larbret, Toshiyuki Kawashima, Toshio Kitamura, Jérôme Larghero, Najet Debili, William Vainchenker.
Abstract
Polyploidization of megakaryocytes (MKs), the platelet precursors, occurs by endomitosis, a mitotic process that fails at late stages of cytokinesis. Expression and function of Aurora B kinase during endomitosis remain controversial. Here, we report that Aurora B is normally expressed during the human MK endomitotic process. Aurora B localized normally in the midzone or midbody during anaphase and telophase in low ploidy megakaryocytes and in up to 16N rare endomitotic MKs was observed. Aurora B was also functional during cytokinesis as attested by phosphorylation of both its activation site and MgcRacGAP, its main substrate. However, despite its activation, Aurora B did not prevent furrow regression. Inhibition of Aurora B by AZD1152-HQPA decreased cell cycle entry both in 2N to 4N and polyploid MKs and induced apoptosis mainly in 2N to 4N cells. In both MK classes, AZD1152-HQPA induced p53 activation and retinoblastoma hypophosphorylation. Resistance of polyploid MKs to apoptosis correlated to a high BclxL level. Aurora B inhibition did not impair MK polyploidization but profoundly modified the endomitotic process by inducing a mis-segregation of chromosomes and a mitotic failure in anaphase. This indicates that Aurora B is dispensable for MK polyploidization but is necessary to achieve a normal endomitotic process.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20548097 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2010-01-265785
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113