| Literature DB >> 34146466 |
Xian-Feng Wang1, Sheng-An Yang2, Shangyu Gong1, Chih-Hsuan Chang1, Juan Martin Portilla2, Deeptiman Chatterjee1, Jerome Irianto3, Hongcun Bao1, Yi-Chun Huang1, Wu-Min Deng4.
Abstract
Ploidy variation is a cancer hallmark and is frequently associated with poor prognosis in high-grade cancers. Using a Drosophila solid-tumor model where oncogenic Notch drives tumorigenesis in a transition-zone microenvironment in the salivary gland imaginal ring, we find that the tumor-initiating cells normally undergo endoreplication to become polyploid. Upregulation of Notch signaling, however, induces these polyploid transition-zone cells to re-enter mitosis and undergo tumorigenesis. Growth and progression of the transition-zone tumor are fueled by a combination of polyploid mitosis, endoreplication, and depolyploidization. Both polyploid mitosis and depolyploidization are error prone, resulting in chromosomal copy-number variation and polyaneuploidy. Comparative RNA-seq and epistasis analysis reveal that the DNA-damage response genes, also active during meiosis, are upregulated in these tumors and are required for the ploidy-reduction division. Together, these findings suggest that polyploidy and associated cell-cycle variants are critical for increased tumor-cell heterogeneity and genome instability during cancer progression.Entities:
Keywords: Drosophila tumor model; aneuploidy; chromosomal instability (CIN); copy number variations (CNV); depolyploidization; ploidy reduction; polyaneuploidy; tumor evolution; tumor hotspot; tumor progression
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34146466 PMCID: PMC8282749 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2021.05.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 13.417