| Literature DB >> 23771628 |
Sandra Gómez-López1, Robin G Lerner, Claudia Petritsch.
Abstract
Stem and progenitor cells are characterized by their ability to self-renew and produce differentiated progeny. A fine balance between these processes is achieved through controlled asymmetric divisions and is necessary to generate cellular diversity during development and to maintain adult tissue homeostasis. Disruption of this balance may result in premature depletion of the stem/progenitor cell pool, or abnormal growth. In many tissues, including the brain, dysregulated asymmetric divisions are associated with cancer. Whether there is a causal relationship between asymmetric cell division defects and cancer initiation is as yet not known. Here, we review the cellular and molecular mechanisms that regulate asymmetric cell divisions in the neural lineage and discuss the potential connections between this regulatory machinery and cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23771628 PMCID: PMC3901929 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-013-1386-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Fig. 1Asymmetric division in Drosophila neuroblasts. Polarized localization of apical complexes is established during prophase. During metaphase and telophase, the spindle is anchored and orientated relative to the axis of apico-basal polarity. Cell-fate determinants are asymmetrically segregated into self-renewing neuroblasts or differentiating ganglion mother cells
Fig. 2Patterns of cell division during mammalian embryonic neurogenesis. During the peak period of murine neurogenesis radial glia (RG) cells divide in the ventricular zone (VZ) mainly asymmetrically, generating one RG cell and one neuron, or one RG cell and one basal progenitor (BP), which migrates to the subventricular zone (SVZ). Asymmetric RG divisions also produce outer RG (oRG) cells, which lose their ventricular attachment and translocate to the SVZ, where they divide asymmetrically to produce neurons
Fig. 3Progenitor divisions in the postnatal and adult brain. a Neural stem cells (NSCs) in the adult ventricular (V)-subventricular zone (SVZ) neurogenic niche extend contacts to blood vessels and the lateral ventricle (LV) and are surrounded by ependymal cells (ECs). NSC divisions produce transit amplifying progenitors (TAPs) and oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), which in turn divide to generate postmitotic progeny. b Postnatal cortical astrocytes undergo symmetric proliferative divisions. c In the white matter, adult OPCs divide either symmetrically or asymmetrically to self-renew and produce differentiated oligodendrocytes
Fig. 4Defects in polarity, spindle orientation, or cell-fate specification disrupt asymmetric division and result in hyperproliferation and loss of differentiation of Drosophila neuroblasts. Serial allografting of asymmetry-defective, hyperproliferative neuroblasts leads to chromosomal abnormalities and aneuploidy
Asymmetric cell division regulators and their role during cancer formation and progression
| Gene | Chromosomal location | Genetic alteration and/or expression in human tumors | Cancer-associated phenotypes in in vivo mouse models |
|---|---|---|---|
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| 20q13.2–q13.3 | Amplified and overexpressed in diverse human tumors [ | Pharmacological inhibition in breast [ |
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| 15q24.2 | Overexpressed in astrocytomas [ | Pericyte deficiencies in |
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| 11q14.1 | Localizes within a large common fragile site [ | Not determined |
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| 17p11.2 | Gene loss in 75 % of colorectal cancers [ |
|
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| 17q24–q25 | Loss or aberrantly localized in gastric adenocarcinomas [ | Forced expression in breast cancer cell lines reduces their metastatic potential upon subcutaneous xenotransplantation [ |
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| 12q24.1–q24.31 | Upregulated in oligodendrogliomas [ |
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| 12q24.1–q24.31 | Increased expression in CML [ | Loss of function in HSCs expressing NUP98-HOXA9 reduces leukemia growth in vivo [ |
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| 14q24.3 | Reduced protein levels in some mammary carcinomas [ | Ectopic expression in HSCs transduced with BCR-ABL and NUP98-HOXA9 reduces the incidence and propagation of blast crisis in vivo [ |
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| 10p11.21 | Reduced expression in melanoma, breast, lung, and bladder cancers [ | In the presence of relevant oncogenic mutations, loss of |
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| 16q22.1 | Increased expression [ | Expression of a dominant negative form in mammary carcinoma cells reduces incidence of metastases [ |
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| 16p12.2 | Increased expression in several tumors, including NSCLC [ | siRNA-mediated depletion in bladder cancer [ |
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| 2p21 | Overexpressed in NSCLC [ | Expression of a dominant negative form in lung cancer cells [ |
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| 8q24.3 | Reduced expression or mis-localized in glioma [ | Loss of |
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| 11p15.5 | Loss of heterozygosity in some gliomas [ | Knockdown increases incidence of PDGF-driven gliomas in |
Fig. 5Cellular origin of malignant gliomas. a Oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) in the adult brain can divide asymmetrically to give rise to a self-renewing NG2+ OPC and a differentiated NG2-O4+ oligodendrocyte. In p53 hemizygous mice, expression of the viral oncogene verbB in OPCs disrupts asymmetric OPC division and causes hyperproliferation of symmetrically dividing premalignant glioma precursor (PGP) cells, which, following unknown transformative events, eventually give rise to oligodendrogliomas. Similar to their human counterparts, murine oligodendrogliomas contain symmetrically dividing NG2+ tumor-propagating cells (TPCs). b Inducing oncogenic mutations of core signaling pathways (e.g., inactivation of the p53 and Rb tumor suppressor pathways and activation of RTK signaling) in mouse neural stem cells (NSCs) leads to formation of tumors with features of high-grade astrocytomas. CD133+ cancer stem cells (CSCs) isolated from human high-grade astrocytomas self-renew through symmetric and asymmetric cell divisions
Fig. 6Loss of polarity, ACD, and tissue architecture during EMT may contribute to invasion and metastasis. Apical (self-renewal, red) and basal (pro-differentiation, orange) signals are segregated to opposite compartments in asymmetric divisions of some epithelial progenitor cells (green). Disruption of ACD may lead to breakdown of polarity and increased inheritance of pro-proliferative signals usually confined to the apical domain, and a concomitant loss of cell-fate specification. Disruption of apical domain and AJ stability contribute to loss of epithelial integrity, and may be important steps in tumor cell invasion and metastasis