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An Immunosurveillance Mechanism Controls Cancer Cell Ploidy.

Authors :
Senovilla, Laura
Vitale, Ilio
Martins, Isabelle
Tailler, Maximilien
Pailleret, Claire
Michaud, Mickaël
Galluzzi, Lorenzo
Adjemian, Sandy
Kepp, Oliver
Niso-Santano, Mireia
Shen, Shensi
Mariño, Guillermo
Criollo, Alfredo
Boilève, Alice
Job, Bastien
Ladoire, Sylvain
Ghiringhelli, François
Sistigu, Antonella
Yamazaki, Takahiro
Rello-Varona, Santiago
Source :
Science. 9/28/2012, Vol. 337 Issue 6102, p1678-1684. 7p.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Cancer cells accommodate multiple genetic and epigenetic alterations that initially activate intrinsic (cell-autonomous) and extrinsic (immune-mediated) oncosuppressive mechanisms. Only once these barriers to oncogenesis have been overcome can malignant growth proceed unrestrained. Tetraploidization can contribute to oncogenesis because hyperploid cells are genomically unstable. We report that hyperploid cancer cells become immunogenic because of a constitutive endoplasmic reticulum stress response resulting in the aberrant cell surface exposure of calreticulin. Hyperploid, calreticulin-exposing cancer cells readily proliferated in immunodeficient mice and conserved their increased DNA content. In contrast, hyperploid cells injected into immunocompetent mice generated tumors only after a delay, and such tumors exhibited reduced DNA content, endoplasmic reticulum stress, and calreticulin exposure. Our results unveil an immunosurveillance system that imposes immunoselection against hyperploidy in carcinogen- and oncogene-induced cancers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00368075
Volume :
337
Issue :
6102
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
82556975
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1224922