4.8 Article

The presence of extra chromosomes leads to genomic instability

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10754

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Funding

  1. Max Planck Society
  2. Center for Integrated Protein Science, Munich
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
  4. department of Medical Genetics, University Medical Center Utrecht
  5. Israel Science Foundation [176/11]
  6. Israeli Cancer Association
  7. Chief Scientist Office of the Israel Ministry of Health
  8. Israeli centres of research excellence (I-Core, Gene regulation in complex human disease) [41/11]

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Aneuploidy is a hallmark of cancer and underlies genetic disorders characterized by severe developmental defects, yet the molecular mechanisms explaining its effects on cellular physiology remain elusive. Here we show, using a series of human cells with defined aneuploid karyotypes, that gain of a single chromosome increases genomic instability. Next-generation sequencing and SNP-array analysis reveal accumulation of chromosomal rearrangements in aneuploids, with break point junction patterns suggestive of replication defects. Trisomic and tetrasomic cells also show increased DNA damage and sensitivity to replication stress. Strikingly, we find that aneuploidy-induced genomic instability can be explained by the reduced expression of the replicative helicase MCM2-7. Accordingly, restoring near-wild-type levels of chromatin-bound MCM helicase partly rescues the genomic instability phenotypes. Thus, gain of chromosomes triggers replication stress, thereby promoting genomic instability and possibly contributing to tumorigenesis.

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