| Literature DB >> 31447882 |
Federica Natali1,2, Giulia Rancati1.
Abstract
The mutator phenotype hypothesis was postulated almost 40 years ago to reconcile the observation that while cancer cells display widespread mutational burden, acquisition of mutations in non-transformed cells is a rare event. Moreover, it also suggested that cancer evolution could be fostered by increased genome instability. Given the evolutionary conservation throughout the tree of life and the genetic tractability of model organisms, yeast and bacterial species pioneered studies to dissect the functions of genes required for genome maintenance (caretaker genes) or for cell growth control (gatekeeper genes). In this review, we first provide an overview of what we learned from model organisms about the roles of these genes and the genome instability that arises as a consequence of their dysregulation. We then discuss our current understanding of how mutator phenotypes shape the evolution of bacteria and yeast species. We end by bringing clinical evidence that lessons learned from single-cell organisms can be applied to tumor evolution.Entities:
Keywords: adaptation; asexually reproducing organisms; cell-to-cell heterogeneity; mutator phenotype; selective pressure
Year: 2019 PMID: 31447882 PMCID: PMC6691094 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2019.00713
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
The table reports a list of mutations discussed in the section “Cells losing balance” and details phenotypic consequences arising from such mutations.
| Gene |
| Type of mutation | Mutated domain | Affected function | Phenotype | Human mutator allele | Clinical relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| pol3-D321G ( | Amino acid substitution ( | ExoI motif ( | Exonuclease proofreading activity ( | Increased forward mutation rate at | POLD1-D316G ( | Mutation identified in colorectal cancer and endometrial cancer ( |
| pol3-C324Y ( | As above ( | As above ( | As above ( | As above ( | POLD1-C319Y ( | Mutation observed in multiple myeloma and brain tumor ( | |
| pol3-L612M ( | As above ( | DNA polymerase motif ( | Partitioning of mismatches to the exonuclease active site ( | Increased forward mutation rate at | L606M ( | Mutation observed in biallelic mismatch repair deficiency child brain tumor ( | |
| pol3-R696W ( | As above ( | DNA polymerase motif ( | Fidelity of nucleotide incorporation ( | Increased forward mutations at | POLD1-R689W ( | Mutation identified in the colon cancer cell line DLD1 ( | |
|
| msh2-G693S ( | As above ( | Walker A motif of | Recognition of base–base mispairs and indels of various size ( | Increase in reverse mutations at lys2::InsE-A14 locus (44- to 10,000-fold) compared to WT ( | hMSH2-G674S ( | Mutation associated with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) ( |
|
|
| Overexpression ( | Efficiency of other DNA damage repair pathways due to sequestration of factors, such as PCNA ( | As above ( | hMSH2–hMSH6 copy number amplification ( | Overexpression of MSH2 and MAH6 in oral squamous cell carcinoma from patient’s biopsy correlates with poor prognosis ( | |
|
| mlh1-G64R ( | Amino acid substitution ( | ATP binding domain of | Exonuclease activity ( | Increase in forward -mutations at | hMLH1-G67R ( | Mutation identified in patients with HNPCC ( |
| mlh1-G64E ( | As above ( | As above ( | As above ( | As above ( | hMLH1-G67E ( | Mutation identified in a patient with a family history of atypical cancers, carrying male breast cancer, leiomyosarcoma of the thigh, colon cancer, and prostate cancer ( | |
|
|
| Overexpression from the natural promoter or from ADH1 promoter ( | Formation of MMR complexes due to excessive binding with Mlh1 ( | Increase in forward mutations at | Overexpression of | Mlh1 overexpression correlated with genetic instability, advanced tumor stage, and poor outcome in patients with prostatic cancer ( | |
| Δ mlh1 ( | Homozygous deletion (haploid) ( | Exonuclease activity ( | As above ( | Reduced expression of | Downregulation of MLH1 associated with the promoter hypermethylation observed in Lynch syndrome patients ( | ||
| MLH1/Δ mlh1 (12) | Heterozygous deletion (diploid) ( | As above ( | As above ( | As above ( | As above ( |
ADH1, alcohol dehydrogenase 1; PCNA, proliferating cell nuclear antigen; WT, wild type.
Figure 1The mutator population (left) experiences enhanced genome instability and acquires cell-to-cell heterogeneity, while the non-mutator population (right) expands clonally. Upon application of selection, the mutator-induced phenotypic variation increases the probability of the population to have cells with a selective advantage (green cells) that could be fixed. Conversely, the clonal non-mutator population has higher probability of becoming extinct (red cells). Once adaptive mutations have been fixed and the population reaches a local optimum, acquisition of additional variation is detrimental and selected against (purple, orange, and grey cells). To increase adaptation in non-selective conditions, the mutator population can evolve a suppressor of the genome instability phenotype (dark green cells).