| Literature DB >> 33110215 |
Jianqing Liang1,2, Zubiao Niu1, Bo Zhang1,3, Xiaochen Yu1, You Zheng1, Chenxi Wang1, He Ren1,3, Manna Wang1,4, Banzhan Ruan1, Hongquan Qin1,4, Xin Zhang1,5, Songzhi Gu1, Xiaoyong Sai6, Yanhong Tai7, Lihua Gao1, Li Ma4, Zhaolie Chen1, Hongyan Huang8, Xiaoning Wang9, Qiang Sun10.
Abstract
Entosis was proposed to promote aneuploidy and genome instability by cell-in-cell mediated engulfment in tumor cells. We reported here, in epithelial cells, that entosis coupled with mitotic arrest functions to counteract genome instability by targeting aneuploid mitotic progenies for engulfment and elimination. We found that the formation of cell-in-cell structures associated with prolonged mitosis, which was sufficient to induce entosis. This process was controlled by the tumor suppressor p53 (wild-type) that upregulates Rnd3 expression in response to DNA damages associated with prolonged metaphase. Rnd3-compartmentalized RhoA activities accumulated during prolonged metaphase to drive cell-in-cell formation. Remarkably, this prolonged mitosis-induced entosis selectively targets non-diploid progenies for internalization, blockade of which increased aneuploidy. Thus, our work uncovered a heretofore unrecognized mechanism of mitotic surveillance for entosis, which eliminates newly born abnormal daughter cells in a p53-dependent way, implicating in the maintenance of genome integrity.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33110215 PMCID: PMC7862607 DOI: 10.1038/s41418-020-00645-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Differ ISSN: 1350-9047 Impact factor: 12.067