* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download View presentation - Indian Academy of Sciences
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Mitotic Stress in Cancer: Tipping the Fine Balance SUSANTA ROYCHOUDHURY Saroj Gupta Cancer Center and Research Institute Former, CSIR-Indian Institute of Chemical Biology Kolkata 81st Annual Meeting, Indian Academy of Sciences 6-8 November 2015 IISER, Pune THEODOR BOVERI (1862-1915) Born 12 October 1862 Died 15 October 1915 Nationality German Fields Genetics, Cell biology Embryonic development Known for Boveri-Sutton chromosome theory Centrosome He reasoned in 1902 that a cancerous tumor begins with a single cell in which the makeup of its chromosomes becomes scrambled, causing the cells to divide uncontrollably. He proposed carcinogenesis was the result of aberrant mitoses and uncontrolled growth caused by radiation, physical or chemical insults or by microscopic Pathogens. Wikipedia Chromosomal Abnormalities in Human Cancer Science, 19 August 2011 Cell Cycle and Mitosis The Spindle Assembly Checkpoint (SAC) Metaphase Anaphase Bub3 BubR1 C-M2 APC/C Cdc20 Securin Separase C-M2: Closed Mad2 CyclinB CDK1 Adapted from Silva et al., Cell Proliferation, 2011 Fine Balance is the Key “…..few cancer-associated mutations in these or other mitotic regulators have been described thus far and many of these molecules do not fit into the classical definition of oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes. In some expression cases, of both these over-expression genes result in and decreased mitotic arrest. Moreover, some mitotic regulators such as MAD2 are either up- or down-regulated depending on the tumor types and, in both cases, these alterations result in chromosomal imbalances and tumor development.” Perez de Castro et al., Carcinogenesis, 2007 Agenda Specific molecular defects in SAC leads to aneuploidy in cancer Chromosome abnormality in cancer cells can be exploited for its own destruction. Overexpression of Cdc20 Causes Aneuploidy Cdc20 low Cdc20 high Cdc20 low Cdc20 high Comparison between -Noc and +Noc: p= 0.2671 for Cdc20 low; p= 0.0063 for Cdc20 high Mandal et al, Carcinogenesis, 2006 How does the SAC Switch Function? IN PROMETAPHASE PLK1 Ub Ub Bub3 P Mad2 BubR1 Cdc20 APC/C UbcH10 P CDK1 Co-regulated overexpression of Cdc20 and UbcH10 causes chromosome non-disjunction Cdc20 Cdc20 Excess Cdc20 Chromosome Non-disjunction Spindle assembly checkpoint active APC/C Active APC/C UbcH10 UbcH10 A novel transcription regulatory function of APC/CCdc20 complex APC/C Cdc20 E2F1 CBP/p300 DP1 +1 Ac Ac UBCH10 Response element UBCH10 promoter Nath et al, J. Biol. Chem, 2011 Nath and Chowdhury et al, Mol Cell Biol (2015) Forcing premature cell division Control Control +Noc Cdc20 +Noc UbcH10 +Noc E2F1 +Noc pCDNA5-CDC20 transfected pCDNA3E2F1 transfected pCS2-UBCH10 transfected Mock transfected Deregulation of Cdc20-E2F1 mediated UBCH10 expression leads to ANEUPLOIDY Premature chromosome segregation causes aneuploidy Proposed mechanism for aneuploidy APC/C CBP/p300 E2F1 DP1 E2F1 DP1 Cdc20 Cdc20 +1 Rb Response element UbcH10 UbcH10 UBCH10 promoter UbcH10 p53 UBCH10 UbcH10 UbcH10 Premature anaphase entry Spindle assembly checkpoint active Banerjee et al, Nucleic Acid Res (2009) Nath et al, J. Biol. Chem (2011) Aneuploidy Nath and Chowdhury et al, Mol Cell Biol (2015) SAC as a system ?? Transcriptional regulation Regulation of SAC proteins Epigenetic regulation Micro RNA Biogenesis and Function miR-125b induces chromosomal instability in a Mad1-specific manner UPCI:SCC084 Excess miR-125b decreases cell viability 120 800 100 600 Percent viability Number of colonies 700 500 400 300 200 Empty vector 60 miR-125b 40 miR125b+Mad1 20 100 0 pRNAU6.1miR-125b (mg) 80 0 0.25 0.5 1 2 0 Hours 0 after transfection UPCI:SCC084 24 48 72 90 Proposed model illustrating miR-125b mediated regulation of SAC and cell fate miR-125b miR-125b MAD1 MAD1 Mad1 Mad1 TEMPORARY SAC ON SAC OFF MITOTIC DELAY AND CIN CELL DEATH PREMATURE MITOTIC EXIT AND CIN CELL PROLIFERATION Bhattacharjya et al., Cell Death Differ., 2012 Witheferin A kills cancer cells by degrading Spindle Assembly Checkpoint complex Das et al., Biochem Pharmacol., 2014 SAC inactive Mitotic delay Premature anaphase entry Level of aneuploidy SAC hyperactive Death Aneuploidy Survival Cell death Cell death Cell proliferation Cell proliferation Summary Mechanistic insight into the cause of chromosomal instability in cancer through SAC deregulation has been generated. A novel transcriptional role of APC/CCdc20 Complex has been established. Two tumor suppressor genes RB and p53 have been implicated in SAC regulation. miRNA mediated SAC regulation has been documented. SAC proteins as potential target for the development of anti-cancer biologics and naturally occurring small molecules has been demonstrated. PAST PhD STUDENTS & RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Sumana Tania Sanjib Damayanti PRESENT PhD STUDENTS AND RESEARCH ASSOCIATES Arindam kayum Debrup Abhishek Kumar Dishari Chetan Pijush Sangeeta Ruma Acknowledgement The Basic Scientist Collaborators: The Clinical Collaborators: Dr. Chinmay K. Panda, CNCI Prof. Nitai P. Bhattacharyya, SINP Prof Partha P. Majumder, NIBMG Prof. Bidyut Roy, ISI Dr. Shantanu Chowdhury, IGIB Dr. Dibyendu Bhattacharyay, ACTREC Dr. Saurabh Ghosh, ISI Prof. Siddhartha Roy, IICB Dr. Santu Bandyopadhyay, IICB Dr. Hemanta K. Majumder, IICB Prof. Dev Mukhopadhyay, Mayo Clinic Dr. Maitrayee Dasgupta, CU Dr. Sanghamitra Sengupta, CU Dr. Arunabha Sengupta Dr. Arun Roy Dr. Jayanta Chakrabarty, CNCI Prof. Abhijit Chowdhury, IPGMER Dr. Mrinalini Moghe, DMH Dr. Sultan Pradhan, PAKH Financial support: CSIR DBT DST ICMR WBDST At the end of 1951 some 40,000 men and women on the British Medical Register replied to a simple questioner relating to their smoking habits. Sir Richard Doll (1912-2005) On that basis they were divided into non-smokers and three groups of smokers (including ex-smokers) according to the amount they smoked at that time (or when they gave up). This preliminary report is confined to the deaths among the 24,389 men over the age of 35. A. Bradford Hill (1897-1991) Though the numbers of deaths at present available are small the resulting rates reveal a significant and steadily rising mortality from deaths due to cancer of the lung as the amount of tobacco smoked increases. Aneuploidy Caused CIN or CIN Caused Aneuploidy ? Experiments: + chr. 3 1. MIN+ Stable (2n+1) cells 2. MIN+ x MIN+ Fused stable cell (4n) 3. CIN+ x CIN+ Fused cell, unstable 4. MIN+ x CIN+ Fused cell: MIN- : CIN+ •Abnormal no. of chrs. in a cell by itself could not account for high level of CIN found in the aneuploid cells •CIN phenotype may be acting dominantly at the cellular level. Expression analysis of ‘mitotic hits’ Mutation analysis of ‘mitotic hits’ 2-7% mutation 5% Underexpressed 1% Overexpressed 15% 1-2% mutation 11% Data not found 1% < 1% mutation 84% Unchanged 83% Total mitotic genes analyzed in 8 HNSCC datasets 557 Total mitotic genes analyzed 525 Genes over expressed 82 Genes with <1% mutation 440 Genes under expressed 8 Genes with 1-2% mutation 60 Genes with 2-7% mutation 25 Genes that remain unchanged 461 No data obtained 6 Cancer Gene Census Catalogue of Somatic mutations in cancer (COSMIC) v74 Release Slide updated 14 October 2015 Other Statistics Total Number Somatic Mutation 534 Germline Mutation 88 Total Genes 573 Source: http://www.sanger.ac.uk/genetics/CGP/Census/ PARADOX Spontaneous mutation frequency for human is 1.4x10-10 nucleotides/cell/division or 2.0x10-7 mutations/gene/cell division. Clonal theory suggests that cancer arise in one or, few cells. Thus, only two or three mutations per tumor are accountable from background mutation frequency calculation. In contrast, four to eight mutations in growth regulatory genes were observed in most tumors. Cancer cells show increased genomic instability. Loeb LA, Cancer Res. 34: 2311 (1974) Arial view of carcinogenesis Vogelstein et al, Science, 339, 1546 (2013) DNA repair Defects and Human Cancer CBP/p300 E2F1 E2F1 APC/C Cdc20 Cdc20 +1 UBCH10 Rb p53 UbcH10 Premature anaphase entry Spindle assembly checkpoint active Nath and Chowdhury et al, Mol Cell Biol (2015) Aneuploidy Banerjee et al, Nucleic Acid Res (2009)