Numerical chromosomal instability mediates susceptibility to radiation treatment Journal Article


Authors: Bakhoum, S. F.; Kabeche, L.; Wood, M. D.; Laucius, C. D.; Qu, D.; Laughney, A. M.; Reynolds, G. E.; Louie, R. J.; Phillips, J.; Chan, D. A.; Zaki, B. I.; Murnane, J. P.; Petritsch, C.; Compton, D. A.
Article Title: Numerical chromosomal instability mediates susceptibility to radiation treatment
Abstract: The exquisite sensitivity of mitotic cancer cells to ionizing radiation (IR) underlies an important rationale for the widely used fractionated radiation therapy. However, the mechanism for this cell cycle-dependent vulnerability is unknown. Here we show that treatment with IR leads to mitotic chromosome segregation errors in vivo and long-lasting aneuploidy in tumour-derived cell lines. These mitotic errors generate an abundance of micronuclei that predispose chromosomes to subsequent catastrophic pulverization thereby independently amplifying radiation-induced genome damage. Experimentally suppressing whole-chromosome missegregation reduces downstream chromosomal defects and significantly increases the viability of irradiated mitotic cells. Further, orthotopically transplanted human glioblastoma tumours in which chromosome missegregation rates have been reduced are rendered markedly more resistant to IR, exhibiting diminished markers of cell death in response to treatment. This work identifies a novel mitotic pathway for radiation-induced genome damage, which occurs outside of the primary nucleus and augments chromosomal breaks. This relationship between radiation treatment and whole-chromosome missegregation can be exploited to modulate therapeutic response in a clinically relevant manner.
Keywords: mitosis; dna; fractionation; aneuploidy; mechanism; induced cell-death; cancer; extra centrosomes; mis-segregation; sensitizers
Journal Title: Nature Communications
Volume: 6
ISSN: 2041-1723
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2015-01-21
Start Page: 5990
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000348812100008
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms6990
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 25606712
PMCID: PMC4516720
Notes: Article -- 5990 -- Source: Wos
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  1. Samuel F Bakhoum
    81 Bakhoum