[HTML][HTML] Karyotypic determinants of chromosome instability in aneuploid budding yeast

J Zhu, N Pavelka, WD Bradford, G Rancati, R Li�- PLoS genetics, 2012 - journals.plos.org
PLoS genetics, 2012journals.plos.org
Recent studies in cancer cells and budding yeast demonstrated that aneuploidy, the state of
having abnormal chromosome numbers, correlates with elevated chromosome instability
(CIN), ie the propensity of gaining and losing chromosomes at a high frequency. Here we
have investigated ploidy-and chromosome-specific determinants underlying aneuploidy-
induced CIN by observing karyotype dynamics in fully isogenic aneuploid yeast strains with
ploidies between 1N and 2N obtained through a random meiotic process. The aneuploid�…
Recent studies in cancer cells and budding yeast demonstrated that aneuploidy, the state of having abnormal chromosome numbers, correlates with elevated chromosome instability (CIN), i.e. the propensity of gaining and losing chromosomes at a high frequency. Here we have investigated ploidy- and chromosome-specific determinants underlying aneuploidy-induced CIN by observing karyotype dynamics in fully isogenic aneuploid yeast strains with ploidies between 1N and 2N obtained through a random meiotic process. The aneuploid strains exhibited various levels of whole-chromosome instability (i.e. chromosome gains and losses). CIN correlates with cellular ploidy in an unexpected way: cells with a chromosomal content close to the haploid state are significantly more stable than cells displaying an apparent ploidy between 1.5 and 2N. We propose that the capacity for accurate chromosome segregation by the mitotic system does not scale continuously with an increasing number of chromosomes, but may occur via discrete steps each time a full set of chromosomes is added to the genome. On top of such general ploidy-related effect, CIN is also associated with the presence of specific aneuploid chromosomes as well as dosage imbalance between specific chromosome pairs. Our findings potentially help reconcile the divide between gene-centric versus genome-centric theories in cancer evolution.
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