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APC/C Dysfunction Limits Excessive Cancer Chromosomal Instability

Authors :
Laurent Sansregret
Carlos López-García
David J. Barry
Charles Swanton
Mark Petronczki
Martin R. Singleton
René H. Medema
William C. H. Chao
Andre Koch
Stuart Horswell
Michael Howell
James O. Patterson
Andrew Rowan
Rachael Instrell
Sally M. Dewhurst
Michael Way
Paul Nurse
Nicholas McGranahan
Source :
Cancer Discovery. 7:218-233
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2017.

Abstract

Intercellular heterogeneity, exacerbated by chromosomal instability (CIN), fosters tumor heterogeneity and drug resistance. However, extreme CIN correlates with improved cancer outcome, suggesting that karyotypic diversity required to adapt to selection pressures might be balanced in tumors against the risk of excessive instability. Here, we used a functional genomics screen, genome editing, and pharmacologic approaches to identify CIN-survival factors in diploid cells. We find partial anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) dysfunction lengthens mitosis, suppresses pharmacologically induced chromosome segregation errors, and reduces naturally occurring lagging chromosomes in cancer cell lines or following tetraploidization. APC/C impairment caused adaptation to MPS1 inhibitors, revealing a likely resistance mechanism to therapies targeting the spindle assembly checkpoint. Finally, CRISPR-mediated introduction of cancer somatic mutations in the APC/C subunit cancer driver gene CDC27 reduces chromosome segregation errors, whereas reversal of an APC/C subunit nonsense mutation increases CIN. Subtle variations in mitotic duration, determined by APC/C activity, influence the extent of CIN, allowing cancer cells to dynamically optimize fitness during tumor evolution. Significance: We report a mechanism whereby cancers balance the evolutionary advantages associated with CIN against the fitness costs caused by excessive genome instability, providing insight into the consequence of CDC27 APC/C subunit driver mutations in cancer. Lengthening of mitosis through APC/C modulation may be a common mechanism of resistance to cancer therapeutics that increase chromosome segregation errors. Cancer Discov; 7(2); 218–33. ©2017 AACR. See related commentary by Burkard and Weaver, p. 134. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 115

Details

ISSN :
21598290 and 21598274
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer Discovery
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........eb07c04068a625b484a04b0b8ab942d0