Checkpoint-apoptosis uncoupling in human and mouse embryonic stem cells: a source of karyotpic instability

Author:

Mantel Charlie1,Guo Ying1,Lee Man Ryul2,Kim Min-Kyoung3,Han Myung-Kwan1,Shibayama Hirohiko4,Fukuda Seiji1,Yoder Mervin C.1,Pelus Louis M.1,Kim Kye-Seong2,Broxmeyer Hal E.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology & Immunology and the Walther Oncology Center, Indiana University School of Medicine, and the Walther Cancer Institute, Indianapolis, IN;

2. Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Hanyang University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea

3. Department of Medical Genetics, Hanyang University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea;

4. Department of Hematology and Oncology, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan;

Abstract

Abstract Karyotypic abnormalities in cultured embryonic stem cells (ESCs), especially near-diploid aneuploidy, are potential obstacles to ESC use in regenerative medicine. Events causing chromosomal abnormalities in ESCs may be related to events in tumor cells causing chromosomal instability (CIN) in human disease. However, the underlying mechanisms are unknown. Using multiparametric permeabilized-cell flow cytometric analysis, we found that the mitotic-spindle checkpoint, which helps maintain chromosomal integrity during all cell divisions, functions in human and mouse ESCs, but does not initiate apoptosis as it does in somatic cells. This allows an unusual tolerance to polyploidy resulting from failed mitosis, which is common in rapidly proliferating cell populations and which is reduced to near-diploid aneuploidy, which is also common in human neoplastic disease. Checkpoint activation in ESC-derived early-differentiated cells results in robust apoptosis without polyploidy/aneuploidy similar to that in somatic cells. Thus, the spindle checkpoint is “uncoupled” from apoptosis in ESCs and is a likely source of karyotypic abnormalities. This natural behavior of ESCs to tolerate/survive varying degrees of ploidy change could complicate genome-reprogramming studies and stem-cell plasticity studies, but could also reveal clues about the mechanisms of CIN in human tumors.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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