Entosis implicates a new role for P53 in microcephaly pathogenesis, beyond apoptosis

Author:

Sterling Noelle A.12,Cho Seo‐Hee3,Kim Seonhee1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Shriners Hospitals Pediatric Research Center Department of Neural Sciences Lewis Katz School of Medicine Temple University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

2. Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program Lewis Katz School of Medicine Temple University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

3. Center for Translational Medicine Department of Medicine Sydney Kimmel Medical College Thomas Jefferson University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractEntosis, a form of cell cannibalism, is a newly discovered pathogenic mechanism leading to the development of small brains, termed microcephaly, in which P53 activation was found to play a major role. Microcephaly with entosis, found in Pals1 mutant mice, displays P53 activation that promotes entosis and apoptotic cell death. This previously unappreciated pathogenic mechanism represents a novel cellular dynamic in dividing cortical progenitors which is responsible for cell loss. To date, various recent models of microcephaly have bolstered the importance of P53 activation in cell death leading to microcephaly. P53 activation caused by mitotic delay or DNA damage manifests apoptotic cell death which can be suppressed by P53 removal in these animal models. Such genetic studies attest P53 activation as quality control meant to eliminate genomically unfit cells with minimal involvement in the actual function of microcephaly associated genes. In this review, we summarize the known role of P53 activation in a variety of microcephaly models and introduce a novel mechanism wherein entotic cell cannibalism in neural progenitors is triggered by P53 activation.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Publisher

Wiley

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