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Genomic instability in mutant p53 cancer cells upon entotic engulfment

journal contribution
posted on 2019-07-11, 10:52 authored by HL Mackay, D Moore, C Hall, NJ Birkbak, M Jamal-Hanjani, SA Karim, VM Phatak, L Pinon, JP Morton, C Swanton, J Le Quesne, PAJ Muller
Cell-in-cell (CIC) structures are commonly seen in tumours. Their biological significance remains unclear, although they have been associated with more aggressive tumours. Here we report that mutant p53 promotes CIC via live cell engulfment. Engulfed cells physically interfere in cell divisions of host cells and for cells without p53 this leads to host cell death. In contrast, mutant p53 host cells survive, display aberrant divisions, multinucleation and tripolar mitoses. In xenograft studies, CIC-rich p53 mutant/null co-cultures show enhanced tumour growth. Furthermore, our results show that CIC is common within lung adenocarcinomas, is an independent predictor of poor outcome and disease recurrence, is associated with mutant p53 expression and correlated to measures of heterogeneity and genomic instability. These findings suggest that pro-tumorigenic entotic engulfment activity is associated with mutant p53 expression, and the two combined are a key factor in genomic instability.

Funding

P.M. and J.L.Q. are supported by the MRC Toxicology Unit programme funding. P.M. is funded through a Sir Henry Dale fellowship from the Wellcome Trust and the Royal Society. This work would not have been possible without the expert assistance of the histology core facility in the MRC Toxicology Unit (Madhumita Das, Jennifer Edwards, and Leah Officer), the genomics facility the University of Leicester patient data and tissue archiving team (Marco Sereno & Claire Smith), the University Hospitals of Leicester pathology department, the genomics and imaging facilities in MRC Toxicology Unit (Carolyn Jones, Ruth Spriggs, David Read), the imaging facility in the MCRC (Heather Woodhouse), the FACS sorting facility in the MCRC, the animal facility in Leicester University (Rachel Bodycoat) and everyone in the TRACERx consortium. A full list of consortium members appears in Supplementary Note 1.

History

Citation

Nature Communications, 2018, 9, Article number: 3070

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Cancer Research Centre

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Nature Communications

Publisher

Nature Research (part of Springer Nature)

issn

2041-1723

Acceptance date

2018-06-29

Copyright date

2018

Available date

2019-07-11

Publisher version

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-05368-1

Notes

The original version of this article incorrectly omitted an affiliation of Patricia A. J. Muller: ‘Cancer Research UK Manchester Institute, The University of Manchester | Alderley Park, Manchester, SK10 4TG, UK’. This has been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the article. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-06026-2

Language

en

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