4.8 Article

Replication stress induces mitotic death through parallel pathways regulated by WAPL and telomere deprotection

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 10, 期 -, 页码 -

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-12255-w

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资金

  1. Australian Cancer Research Foundation
  2. University of Sydney
  3. Hebrew University Smorgon Foundation
  4. Cancer Institute NSW
  5. ATIP starting grant from CNRS
  6. ANR Tremplin ERC [55911]
  7. European Research Council grant telo-HOOK/ERC [714653]
  8. NIH [R01GM087476, R01CA174942]
  9. Donald and Darlene Shiley Chair
  10. Highland Street Foundation
  11. Fritz B. Burns Foundation
  12. Emerald Foundation
  13. Glenn Center for Aging Research
  14. Australian NHMRC [1106241, 1104461, 1162886, 1043149, 1016701, 1113133]
  15. Leukemia Lymphoma Society SCOR [11283-17]
  16. Victorian State Government Operational Infrastructure Support (OIS) grant
  17. Senri Life Science Foundation
  18. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  19. Daiichi Sankyo Foundation of Life Science
  20. Nakajima Foundation
  21. Mochida Memorial Foundation Research Grant
  22. Cancer Council NSW [RG 15-12]
  23. Cancer Institute NSW [11/FRL/5-02]
  24. Independent Research Institutes Infrastructure Support Scheme grant [9000220]
  25. [16H06176]
  26. [16H01406]
  27. European Research Council (ERC) [714653] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)
  28. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1104461, 1106241, 1113133, 1162886] Funding Source: NHMRC

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Mitotic catastrophe is a broad descriptor encompassing unclear mechanisms of cell death. Here we investigate replication stress-driven mitotic catastrophe in human cells and identify that replication stress principally induces mitotic death signalled through two independent pathways. In p53-compromised cells we find that lethal replication stress confers WAPL-dependent centromere cohesion defects that maintain spindle assembly checkpoint-dependent mitotic arrest in the same cell cycle. Mitotic arrest then drives cohesion fatigue and triggers mitotic death through a primary pathway of BAX/BAK-dependent apoptosis. Simultaneously, a secondary mitotic death pathway is engaged through non-canonical telomere deprotection, regulated by TRF2, Aurora B and ATM. Additionally, we find that suppressing mitotic death in replication stressed cells results in distinct cellular outcomes depending upon how cell death is averted. These data demonstrate how replication stress-induced mitotic catastrophe signals cell death with implications for cancer treatment and cancer genome evolution.

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