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Consequences of aneuploidy. Angelika Amon Massachusetts Institute of Technology Howard Hughes Medical Institute Consequences of aneuploidy. Part 1: Introduction. Part 2: The effects of aneuploidy on cell physiology. Part 3: Disease implications. Definition of aneuploidy: Chromosome composition that is not a multiple of the normal chromosome composition. Aneuploidy comes in many different flavors. Aneuploidy comes in many different flavors. Two types of aneuploidy: • Mosaic aneuploidy: some cells in the organism are aneuploid; caused by mitotic chromosome missegregation. • Constitutional aneuploidy: the entire organism is aneuploid; caused by meiotic chromosome missegregation. How does aneuploidy arise? Chromosome segregation problems 2N+x 2N-x The study of aneuploidy has a long tradition. Marcella O Grady s and Theodore Boveri s famous 1902 experiment. The study of aneuploidy has a long tradition. In 1929 Barbara McClintock described the first aneuploid corn plants. The study of aneuploidy has a long tradition. In 1959 Jerome Lejeune showed that Down Syndrome was due to trisomy 21. Consequences of aneuploidy in humans: • All autosomal monosomies and most autosomal trisomies are lethal. • Aneuploidy is the leading cause of mental retardation in humans. • Aneuploidy is the leading cause of miscarriages: 35% of all clinically recognized spontaneous abortions have an incorrect chromosome number. • Associated with cancer: 90% of solid tumors are aneuploid. Summary: The consequences of aneuploidy. • Aneuploidy is detrimental at the organismal level. • Chromosome losses are more detrimental than chromosome gains. • The severity of the phenotypes correlates with the degree of aneuploidy. The questions and conundrums. • Single gene effects or additive effects of many genes, which on their own have little or no effect, or both? The questions and conundrums. • Single gene effects or additive effects of many genes, which on their own have little or no effect, or both? • Case study: Aneuploidy in humans. • Single gene effects: APP duplication in Down syndrome The questions and conundrums. • Single gene effects or additive effects of many genes, which on their own have little or no effect, or both? • Case study: Aneuploidy in humans. • Multi gene effects: Down Syndrome critical region cannot account for the phenotypes of Down Syndrome. The cancer conundrum. • Single chromosomal abnormalities are highly detrimental for the organism, yet cancer, a disease characterized by unrestricted growth is associated with high-level aneuploidy. What are the consequences of aneuploidy on cellular physiology? Consequences of aneuploidy. Overview: Part 1: Historical review of the study of aneuploidy. Part 2: The effects of aneuploidy on cell physiology. Part 3: Disease implications. The effects of aneuploidy on cell physiology. • Models to study the effects of aneuploidy on cells. • Gene-specific effects of aneuploidy. • General effects of aneuploidy: The aneuploidy stress response . Two systems to study the effects of aneuploidy on cell physiology: log2 ratios Defined, low complexity aneuploidies: • 20 yeast strains carrying one or two extra chromosomes. Two systems to study the effects of aneuploidy on cell physiology: Defined, low complexity aneuploidies: • 4 primary MEF lines carrying an extra chromosome. Two systems to study the effects of aneuploidy on cell physiology: Random heterogeneous high complexity aneuploidies: • Meiotic non-disjunctions obtained as progeny of triploid meiosis. • Mitotic non-disjunctions caused by interference with chromosome segregation machinery. Gene-specific effects of aneuploidy. Selmecki et al., 2006 Torres et al., 2007 General effects of aneuploidy: The aneuploidy stress response . • Aneuploidy causes proteotoxic stress. • Aneuploidy causes a transcriptional response. • Aneuploidy causes a G1 delay. Evidence for proteotoxic stress in yeast and mammals: • Compromising proteasome function with chemicals or genetic manipulations impairs the growth of aneuploid yeast cells more than of euploids. • All aneuploid yeast cells are cycloheximide and temperature sensitive. • Aneuploid mouse cells are sensitive to the authophagy inhibitor chloroquine (Tang et al., 2011). • Basal levels of autophagy are increased in trisomic MEFs and following chromosome mis-segregation (Tang et al., 2011). • Aneuploid mouse cells are sensitive to the Hsp90 inhibitor 17-AAG (Tang et al., 2011). Evidence for proteotoxic stress in yeast: Hsp104 foci accumulate in cells. Autophagy is induced upon chromosome mis-segregation. Where is this proteotoxic stress coming from? Is the proteotoxic stress due to proteins made from additional chromosomes? The additional chromosomes are active. DNA (CGH) Chr I Chr V Chr XVI Chr I Chr V Chr XVI Chr I Chr V Chr XVI RNA (array) Protein (SILAC) In collaboration with Noah Dephoure and Steve Gygi The shared phenotypes are due to the additional chromosomes being active. Chromosome size human or mouse DNA does not cause adverse phenotypes. DNA (CGH) Chr I Chr V Chr XVI Phenotypes in 1N+1 are more severe than in 2N+1. RNA (array) Chr I Chr V Chr XVI Chr I Chr V Chr XVI Protein (SILAC) Hypothesis: Aneuploidy leads to excess protein production. This causes, among other deleterious outcomes, proteotoxic stress because overproduction of certain proteins saturates protein quality control pathways. How do you get saturation of protein quality control? 1. Proteins that require protein quality control systems for function are overproduced in aneuploids. i.e. Protein kinases, WD40 repeat proteins, Tubulin, Actin How do you get saturation of protein quality control? 2. Protein stoichiometry imbalances B-A Chr 1 Chr 2 A A A A B B B B [A] Neutralized by protein quality control pathways and sometimes feedback controls of gene expression Examples of this type of control: Alpha and beta tubulin, Ribosomal subunits, Histones How do you get saturation of protein quality control? B-A -A [A] A A A A B B B B A Increased burden on protein quality control pathways and other phenotypes (increased need for energy, cell cycle delay, etc) Chr 1 Chr 2 Chr 2 A A A A Consequences of aneuploidy. Overview: Part 1: Historical review of the study of aneuploidy. Part 2: The effects of aneuploidy on cell physiology. Part 3: Disease implications. • Aneuploidy as a therapeutic target in cancer. • Aneuploidy in neurodegenerative disease. Compounds that selectively impair proliferation of aneuploid mouse cells. Targeted screen identifies AICAR (energy stress inducer) and 17-AAG (proteotoxic stress inducer). Trisomy 13 Trisomy 1 AICAR inhibits the accumulation of trisomic MEFs. Mediated by p53-dependent apoptosis Do AICAR and 17-AAG show efficacy in aneuploid cancer cells? Analysis of MIN and CIN colon cancer cell lines. Highly aneuploid CIN lines but not near euploid MIN lines are sensitive to AICAR+17-AAG AICAR and 17-AAG inhibit CIN tumor cell growth in Xenografts PBS HCT15 SW620 AICAR+17-AAG HCT15 SW620 PBS LoVo AICAR+17-AAG HT29 LoVo HT29 Conclusions: Aneuploidy could be a potential target in tumor therapy. Implications for cancer. • Aneuploidy causes a proliferation disadvantage. • The proliferative disadvantage caused by aneuploidy needs to be overcome during transformation. • Cancer cells may more heavily depend on mechanisms helping cells deal with stress associated with aneuploidy for their survival. • The phenotypes shared by aneuploids may provide new therapeutic targets (i.e. AICAR). Aneuploidy and neurodegenerative diseases. - 10% of adult neurons in the brain are aneuploid (Chun et al.). - Aneuploidy is increased in Alzheimer s patients. The proteotoxic stress caused by aneuploidy could contribute to protein aggregation characteristic of neurodegenerative diseases such as polyQ expansion diseases, Alzheimer s Diseases and Parkinson s Disease. PolyQ-aggregates form more readily in many disomes. Prion conversion rates are increased in disomic yeast strains. Eduardo Torres Bret Williams Jason Sheltzer Ana Oromendia Stefano Santaguida Yun-Chi Tang