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The Functional Role Of P53 In The Regulation Of Tetraploid Cells

Posted on:2012-12-28Degree:DoctorType:Dissertation
Country:ChinaCandidate:Q Y YiFull Text:PDF
GTID:1224330368493586Subject:Genetics
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
p53 abnormality and aneuploidy often coexist in human tumors, and tetraploidy is considered as an intermediate between normal diploidy and aneuploidy. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether and how p53 influences the transformation from tetraploidy to aneuploidy. Live cell imaging was performed to determine the fates and mitotic behaviors of several human and mouse tetraploid cells with different p53 status, and centrosome and spindle immunostaining was used to investigate centrosome behaviors. We found that p53 dominant-negative mutation, point mutation, or knockout led to a 2~ 33-fold increase of multipolar mitosis in N/TERT1, 3T3 and mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs), while mitotic entry and cell death were not significantly affected. In p53-/- tetraploid MEFs, the ability of centrosome clustering was compromised, while centrosome inactivation was not affected. Suppression of RhoA/ROCK activity by specific inhibitors in p53-/- tetraploid MEFs enhanced centrosome clustering, decreased multipolar mitosis from 38% to 20% and 16% for RhoA and ROCK, respectively, while expression of constitutively active RhoA in p53+/+ tetraploid 3T3 cells increased the frequency of multipolar mitosis from 15% to 35%. Thus, we conclude that p53 abnormality impaired centrosome clustering and lead to multipolar mitosis in tetraploid cells by modulating the RhoA/ROCK signaling pathway. This provides an alternative explanation for arising of aneuploidy during tumor initiation and the frequently observed coexistence of p53 abnormalities, multipolar mitosis, and aneuploidy in human tumors.
Keywords/Search Tags:p53, tetraploidy, multipolar mitosis, centrosome clustering, RhoA, ROCK
PDF Full Text Request
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