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Cep55 overexpression promotes genomic instability and tumorigenesis in mice

Authors :
Purba Nag
Meaghan Wall
Andrew Burgess
Debottam Sinha
John W. Finnie
Kum Kum Khanna
Murugan Kalimutho
Devathri Nanayakkara
Veronique A. J. Smits
Goutham Subramanian
Prahlad V. Raninga
Pascal H.G. Duijf
Amanda L. Bain
Sinha, Debottam
Nag, Purba
Nanayakkara, Devathri
Duijf, Pascal HG
Burgess, Andrew
Raninga, Prahlad
Smits, Veronique AJ
Bain, Amanda L
Subramanian, Goutham
Wall, Meaghan
Finnie, John W
Kalimutho, Murugan
Khanna, Kum Kum
Source :
Communications Biology, Vol 3, Iss 1, Pp 1-16 (2020), Communications Biology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

High expression of centrosomal protein CEP55 has been correlated with clinico-pathological parameters across multiple human cancers. Despite significant in vitro studies and association of aberrantly overexpressed CEP55 with worse prognosis, its causal role in vivo tumorigenesis remains elusive. Here, using a ubiquitously overexpressing transgenic mouse model, we show that Cep55 overexpression causes spontaneous tumorigenesis and accelerates Trp53+/− induced tumours in vivo. At the cellular level, using mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs), we demonstrate that Cep55 overexpression induces proliferation advantage by modulating multiple cellular signalling networks including the hyperactivation of the Pi3k/Akt pathway. Notably, Cep55 overexpressing MEFs have a compromised Chk1-dependent S-phase checkpoint, causing increased replication speed and DNA damage, resulting in a prolonged aberrant mitotic division. Importantly, this phenotype was rescued by pharmacological inhibition of Pi3k/Akt or expression of mutant Chk1 (S280A) protein, which is insensitive to regulation by active Akt, in Cep55 overexpressing MEFs. Moreover, we report that Cep55 overexpression causes stabilized microtubules. Collectively, our data demonstrates causative effects of deregulated Cep55 on genome stability and tumorigenesis which have potential implications for tumour initiation and therapy development.<br />Sinha et al. demonstrate that overexpression of centrosomal protein Cep55 in mice is sufficient to cause a wide-spectrum of cancer via multiple mechanisms including hyperactivation of the Pi3k/Akt pathway, stabilized microtubules and a defective replication checkpoint response. These findings are relevant to human cancers as high CEP55 expression is associated with worse prognosis across multiple cancer types.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23993642
Volume :
3
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Communications Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dcb6762be7108a4f7fc2a51057419846
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-020-01304-6