32 research outputs found

    Condensin I recruitment and uneven chromatin condensation precede mitotic cell death in response to DNA damage

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    Mitotic cell death (MCD) is a prominent but poorly defined form of death that stems from aberrant mitosis. One of the early steps in MCD is premature mitosis and uneven chromatin condensation (UCC). The mechanism underlying this phenomenon is currently unknown. In this study, we show that DNA damage in cells with a compromised p53-mediated G2/M checkpoint triggers the unscheduled activation of cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1), activation and chromatin loading of the condensin I complex, and UCC followed by the appearance of multimicronucleated cells, which is evidence of MCD. We demonstrate that these processes engage some of the players of normal mitotic chromatin packaging but not those that drive the apoptotic chromatin condensation. Our findings establish a link between the induction of DNA damage and mitotic abnormalities (UCC) through the unscheduled activation of Cdk1 and recruitment of condensin I. These results demonstrate a clear distinction between the mechanisms that drive MCD-associated and apoptosis-related chromatin condensation and provide mechanistic insights and new readouts for a major cell death process in treated tumors

    Identification of human nephron progenitors capable of generation of kidney structures and functional repair of chronic renal disease

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    Identification of tissue-specific renal stem/progenitor cells with nephrogenic potential is a critical step in developing cell-based therapies for renal disease. In the human kidney, stem/progenitor cells are induced into the nephrogenic pathway to form nephrons until the 34 week of gestation, and no equivalent cell types can be traced in the adult kidney. Human nephron progenitor cells (hNPCs) have yet to be isolated. Here we show that growth of human foetal kidneys in serum-free defined conditions and prospective isolation of NCAM1(+) cells selects for nephron lineage that includes the SIX2-positive cap mesenchyme cells identifying a mitotically active population with in vitro clonogenic and stem/progenitor properties. After transplantation in the chick embryo, these cells—but not differentiated counterparts—efficiently formed various nephron tubule types. hNPCs engrafted and integrated in diseased murine kidneys and treatment of renal failure in the 5/6 nephrectomy kidney injury model had beneficial effects on renal function halting disease progression. These findings constitute the first definition of an intrinsic nephron precursor population, with major potential for cell-based therapeutic strategies and modelling of kidney disease

    Requirement of the MRN complex for ATM activation by DNA damage

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    The ATM protein kinase is a primary activator of the cellular response to DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). In response to DSBs, ATM is activated and phosphorylates key players in various branches of the DNA damage response network. ATM deficiency causes the genetic disorder ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T), characterized by cerebellar degeneration, immunodeficiency, radiation sensitivity, chromosomal instability and cancer predisposition. The MRN complex, whose core contains the Mre11, Rad50 and Nbs1 proteins, is involved in the initial processing of DSBs. Hypomorphic mutations in the NBS1 and MRE11 genes lead to two other genomic instability disorders: the Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS) and A-T like disease (A-TLD), respectively. The order in which ATM and MRN act in the early phase of the DSB response is unclear. Here we show that functional MRN is required for ATM activation, and consequently for timely activation of ATM-mediated pathways. Collectively, these and previous results assign to components of the MRN complex roles upstream and downstream of ATM in the DNA damage response pathway and explain the clinical resemblance between A-T and A-TLD
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