4.7 Article

Multinucleation associated DNA damage blocks proliferation in p53-compromised cells

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-021-01979-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. BBSRC [R01003X/1]
  2. QMUL start-up grant [SBC8DRA2]

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Nuclear atypia is a hallmark of cancer, and its immediate and long-term impact on cells can be determined through single-cell tracking studies. Multinucleation, a form of nuclear atypia, blocks cell proliferation in p53-compromised cells by increasing DNA damage and causing replication stress, suggesting potential therapeutic approaches for limiting tumor heterogeneity.
Nuclear atypia is one of the hallmarks of cancers. Here, we perform single-cell tracking studies to determine the immediate and long-term impact of nuclear atypia. Tracking the fate of newborn cells exhibiting nuclear atypia shows that multinucleation, unlike other forms of nuclear atypia, blocks proliferation in p53-compromised cells. Because similar to 50% of cancers display compromised p53, we explored how multinucleation blocks proliferation. Multinucleation increases 53BP1-decorated nuclear bodies (DNA damage repair platforms), along with a heterogeneous reduction in transcription and protein accumulation across the multi-nucleated compartments. Multinucleation Associated DNA Damage associated with 53BP1-bodies remains unresolved for days, despite an intact NHEJ machinery that repairs laser-induced DNA damage within minutes. Persistent DNA damage, a DNA replication block, and reduced phospho-Rb, reveal a novel replication stress independent cell cycle arrest caused by mitotic lesions. These findings call for segregating protective and prohibitive nuclear atypia to inform therapeutic approaches aimed at limiting tumour heterogeneity.

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