4.4 Article

Constricted migration increases DNA damage and independently represses cell cycle

期刊

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
卷 29, 期 16, 页码 1948-1962

出版社

AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E18-02-0079

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资金

  1. National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health under PSOC Award [U54 CA193417]
  2. National Science Foundation [DMR-1120901]
  3. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  4. Division Of Materials Research [1659512] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. Directorate For Engineering
  6. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [1548571] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Cell migration through dense tissues or small capillaries can elongate the nucleus and even damage it, and any impact on cell cycle has the potential to affect various processes including carcinogenesis. Here, nuclear rupture and DNA damage increase with constricted migration in different phases of cell cycle-which we show is partially repressed. We study several cancer lines that are contact inhibited or not and that exhibit diverse frequencies of nuclear lamina rupture after migration through small pores. DNA repair factors invariably mislocalize after migration, and an excess of DNA damage is evident as pan-nucleoplasmic foci of phosphoactivated ATM and gamma H2AX. Foci counts are suppressed in late cell cycle as expected of mitotic checkpoints, and migration of contact-inhibited cells through large pores into sparse microenvironments leads also as expected to cell-cycle reentry and no effect on a basal level of damage foci. Constricting pores delay such reentry while excess foci occur independent of cell-cycle phase. Knockdown of repair factors increases DNA damage independent of cell cycle, consistent with effects of constricted migration. Because such migration causes DNA damage and impedes proliferation, it illustrates a cancer cell fate choice of go or grow.

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