Literature DB >> 32513814

Spontaneous Polyploids and Antimutators Compete During the Evolution of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mutator Cells.

Maxwell A Tracy1, Mitchell B Lee1, Brady L Hearn1, Ian T Dowsett1, Luke C Thurber1, Jason Loo1, Anisha M Loeb1, Kent Preston1, Miles I Tuncel1, Niloufar Ghodsian1, Anna Bode1, Thao T Tang1, Andy R Chia1, Alan J Herr2.   

Abstract

Mutations affecting DNA polymerase exonuclease domains or mismatch repair (MMR) generate "mutator" phenotypes capable of driving tumorigenesis. Cancers with both defects exhibit an explosive increase in mutation burden that appears to reach a threshold, consistent with selection acting against further mutation accumulation. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae haploid yeast, simultaneous defects in polymerase proofreading and MMR select for "antimutator" mutants that suppress the mutator phenotype. We report here that spontaneous polyploids also escape this "error-induced extinction" and routinely outcompete antimutators in evolved haploid cultures. We performed similar experiments to explore how diploid yeast adapt to the mutator phenotype. We first evolved cells with homozygous mutations affecting polymerase δ proofreading and MMR, which we anticipated would favor tetraploid emergence. While tetraploids arose with a low frequency, in most cultures, a single antimutator clone rose to prominence carrying biallelic mutations affecting the polymerase mutator alleles. Variation in mutation rate between subclones from the same culture suggests that there exists continued selection pressure for additional antimutator alleles. We then evolved diploid yeast modeling MMR-deficient cancers with the most common heterozygous exonuclease domain mutation (POLE-P286R). Although these cells grew robustly, within 120 generations, all subclones carried truncating or nonsynonymous mutations in the POLE-P286R homologous allele (pol2 -P301R) that suppressed the mutator phenotype as much as 100-fold. Independent adaptive events in the same culture were common. Our findings suggest that analogous tumor cell populations may adapt to the threat of extinction by polyclonal mutations that neutralize the POLE mutator allele and preserve intratumoral genetic diversity for future adaptation.
Copyright © 2020 by the Genetics Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  DNA replication; antimutator; mutation spectra; spontaneous polyploidization

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32513814      PMCID: PMC7404223          DOI: 10.1534/genetics.120.303333

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genetics        ISSN: 0016-6731            Impact factor:   4.562


  55 in total

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Authors:  A Morrison; A Sugino
Journal:  Mol Gen Genet       Date:  1994-02

2.  Development of a Comprehensive Genotype-to-Fitness Map of Adaptation-Driving Mutations in Yeast.

Authors:  Sandeep Venkataram; Barbara Dunn; Yuping Li; Atish Agarwala; Jessica Chang; Emily R Ebel; Kerry Geiler-Samerotte; Lucas Hérissant; Jamie R Blundell; Sasha F Levy; Daniel S Fisher; Gavin Sherlock; Dmitri A Petrov
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2016-09-01       Impact factor: 41.582

Review 3.  Mating-type genes and MAT switching in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  James E Haber
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2012-05       Impact factor: 4.562

4.  A common cancer-associated DNA polymerase ε mutation causes an exceptionally strong mutator phenotype, indicating fidelity defects distinct from loss of proofreading.

Authors:  Daniel P Kane; Polina V Shcherbakova
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2014-02-13       Impact factor: 12.701

5.  Human Cancers Express a Mutator Phenotype: Hypothesis, Origin, and Consequences.

Authors:  Lawrence A Loeb
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2016-04-15       Impact factor: 12.701

6.  Combined hereditary and somatic mutations of replication error repair genes result in rapid onset of ultra-hypermutated cancers.

Authors:  Adam Shlien; Brittany B Campbell; Richard de Borja; Ludmil B Alexandrov; Daniele Merico; David Wedge; Peter Van Loo; Patrick S Tarpey; Paul Coupland; Sam Behjati; Aaron Pollett; Tatiana Lipman; Abolfazl Heidari; Shriya Deshmukh; Na'ama Avitzur; Bettina Meier; Moritz Gerstung; Ye Hong; Diana M Merino; Manasa Ramakrishna; Marc Remke; Roland Arnold; Gagan B Panigrahi; Neha P Thakkar; Karl P Hodel; Erin E Henninger; A Yasemin Göksenin; Doua Bakry; George S Charames; Harriet Druker; Jordan Lerner-Ellis; Matthew Mistry; Rina Dvir; Ronald Grant; Ronit Elhasid; Roula Farah; Glenn P Taylor; Paul C Nathan; Sarah Alexander; Shay Ben-Shachar; Simon C Ling; Steven Gallinger; Shlomi Constantini; Peter Dirks; Annie Huang; Stephen W Scherer; Richard G Grundy; Carol Durno; Melyssa Aronson; Anton Gartner; M Stephen Meyn; Michael D Taylor; Zachary F Pursell; Christopher E Pearson; David Malkin; P Andrew Futreal; Michael R Stratton; Eric Bouffet; Cynthia Hawkins; Peter J Campbell; Uri Tabori
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2015-02-02       Impact factor: 38.330

7.  Emergence of DNA polymerase ε antimutators that escape error-induced extinction in yeast.

Authors:  Lindsey N Williams; Alan J Herr; Bradley D Preston
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2013-01-10       Impact factor: 4.562

8.  Mutants in the Exo I motif of Escherichia coli dnaQ: defective proofreading and inviability due to error catastrophe.

Authors:  I J Fijalkowska; R M Schaaper
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1996-04-02       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Comprehensive molecular characterization of human colon and rectal cancer.

Authors: 
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2012-07-18       Impact factor: 49.962

10.  Genomic convergence toward diploidy in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  Aleeza C Gerstein; Hye-Jung E Chun; Alex Grant; Sarah P Otto
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2006-09-22       Impact factor: 5.917

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  7 in total

1.  John W. (Jan) Drake: A Biochemical View of a Geneticist Par Excellence.

Authors:  Linda J Reha-Krantz; Myron F Goodman
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 4.562

2.  How asymmetric DNA replication achieves symmetrical fidelity.

Authors:  Zhi-Xiong Zhou; Scott A Lujan; Adam B Burkholder; Jordan St Charles; Joseph Dahl; Corinne E Farrell; Jessica S Williams; Thomas A Kunkel
Journal:  Nat Struct Mol Biol       Date:  2021-12-09       Impact factor: 15.369

Review 3.  Recent insights into the evolution of mutation rates in yeast.

Authors:  Robert H Melde; Kevin Bao; Nathaniel P Sharp
Journal:  Curr Opin Genet Dev       Date:  2022-07-11       Impact factor: 4.665

4.  Complex mutation profiles in mismatch repair and ribonucleotide reductase mutants reveal novel repair substrate specificity of MutS homolog (MSH) complexes.

Authors:  Natalie A Lamb; Jonathan E Bard; Raphael Loll-Krippleber; Grant W Brown; Jennifer A Surtees
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2022-07-30       Impact factor: 4.402

5.  Mutagenic mechanisms of cancer-associated DNA polymerase ϵ alleles.

Authors:  Mareike Herzog; Elisa Alonso-Perez; Israel Salguero; Jonas Warringer; David J Adams; Stephen P Jackson; Fabio Puddu
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2021-04-19       Impact factor: 16.971

6.  Expression of the cancer-associated DNA polymerase ε P286R in fission yeast leads to translesion synthesis polymerase dependent hypermutation and defective DNA replication.

Authors:  Ignacio Soriano; Enrique Vazquez; Nagore De Leon; Sibyl Bertrand; Ellen Heitzer; Sophia Toumazou; Zhihan Bo; Claire Palles; Chen-Chun Pai; Timothy C Humphrey; Ian Tomlinson; Sue Cotterill; Stephen E Kearsey
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2021-07-06       Impact factor: 5.917

7.  A modified fluctuation assay reveals a natural mutator phenotype that drives mutation spectrum variation within Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  Pengyao Jiang; Anja R Ollodart; Vidha Sudhesh; Alan J Herr; Maitreya J Dunham; Kelley Harris
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2021-09-15       Impact factor: 8.140

  7 in total

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