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A Mitosis Block Links Active Cell Cycle with Human Epidermal Differentiation and Results in Endoreplication

How human self-renewal tissues co-ordinate proliferation with differentiation is unclear. Human epidermis undergoes continuous cell growth and differentiation and is permanently exposed to mutagenic hazard. Keratinocytes are thought to arrest cell growth and cell cycle prior to terminal differentiat...

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Autores principales: Zanet, Jennifer, Freije, Ana, Ruiz, María, Coulon, Vincent, Sanz, J. Ramón, Chiesa, Jean, Gandarillas, Alberto
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3004957/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21187932
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015701
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author Zanet, Jennifer
Freije, Ana
Ruiz, María
Coulon, Vincent
Sanz, J. Ramón
Chiesa, Jean
Gandarillas, Alberto
author_facet Zanet, Jennifer
Freije, Ana
Ruiz, María
Coulon, Vincent
Sanz, J. Ramón
Chiesa, Jean
Gandarillas, Alberto
author_sort Zanet, Jennifer
collection PubMed
description How human self-renewal tissues co-ordinate proliferation with differentiation is unclear. Human epidermis undergoes continuous cell growth and differentiation and is permanently exposed to mutagenic hazard. Keratinocytes are thought to arrest cell growth and cell cycle prior to terminal differentiation. However, a growing body of evidence does not satisfy this model. For instance, it does not explain how skin maintains tissue structure in hyperproliferative benign lesions. We have developed and applied novel cell cycle techniques to human skin in situ and determined the dynamics of key cell cycle regulators of DNA replication or mitosis, such as cyclins E, A and B, or members of the anaphase promoting complex pathway: cdc14A, Ndc80/Hec1 and Aurora kinase B. The results show that actively cycling keratinocytes initiate terminal differentiation, arrest in mitosis, continue DNA replication in a special G2/M state, and become polyploid by mitotic slippage. They unambiguously demonstrate that cell cycle progression coexists with terminal differentiation, thus explaining how differentiating cells increase in size. Epidermal differentiating cells arrest in mitosis and a genotoxic-induced mitosis block rapidly pushes epidermal basal cells into differentiation and polyploidy. These observations unravel a novel mitosis-differentiation link that provides new insight into skin homeostasis and cancer. It might constitute a self-defence mechanism against oncogenic alterations such as Myc deregulation.
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spelling pubmed-30049572010-12-27 A Mitosis Block Links Active Cell Cycle with Human Epidermal Differentiation and Results in Endoreplication Zanet, Jennifer Freije, Ana Ruiz, María Coulon, Vincent Sanz, J. Ramón Chiesa, Jean Gandarillas, Alberto PLoS One Research Article How human self-renewal tissues co-ordinate proliferation with differentiation is unclear. Human epidermis undergoes continuous cell growth and differentiation and is permanently exposed to mutagenic hazard. Keratinocytes are thought to arrest cell growth and cell cycle prior to terminal differentiation. However, a growing body of evidence does not satisfy this model. For instance, it does not explain how skin maintains tissue structure in hyperproliferative benign lesions. We have developed and applied novel cell cycle techniques to human skin in situ and determined the dynamics of key cell cycle regulators of DNA replication or mitosis, such as cyclins E, A and B, or members of the anaphase promoting complex pathway: cdc14A, Ndc80/Hec1 and Aurora kinase B. The results show that actively cycling keratinocytes initiate terminal differentiation, arrest in mitosis, continue DNA replication in a special G2/M state, and become polyploid by mitotic slippage. They unambiguously demonstrate that cell cycle progression coexists with terminal differentiation, thus explaining how differentiating cells increase in size. Epidermal differentiating cells arrest in mitosis and a genotoxic-induced mitosis block rapidly pushes epidermal basal cells into differentiation and polyploidy. These observations unravel a novel mitosis-differentiation link that provides new insight into skin homeostasis and cancer. It might constitute a self-defence mechanism against oncogenic alterations such as Myc deregulation. Public Library of Science 2010-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3004957/ /pubmed/21187932 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015701 Text en Zanet et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zanet, Jennifer
Freije, Ana
Ruiz, María
Coulon, Vincent
Sanz, J. Ramón
Chiesa, Jean
Gandarillas, Alberto
A Mitosis Block Links Active Cell Cycle with Human Epidermal Differentiation and Results in Endoreplication
title A Mitosis Block Links Active Cell Cycle with Human Epidermal Differentiation and Results in Endoreplication
title_full A Mitosis Block Links Active Cell Cycle with Human Epidermal Differentiation and Results in Endoreplication
title_fullStr A Mitosis Block Links Active Cell Cycle with Human Epidermal Differentiation and Results in Endoreplication
title_full_unstemmed A Mitosis Block Links Active Cell Cycle with Human Epidermal Differentiation and Results in Endoreplication
title_short A Mitosis Block Links Active Cell Cycle with Human Epidermal Differentiation and Results in Endoreplication
title_sort mitosis block links active cell cycle with human epidermal differentiation and results in endoreplication
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3004957/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21187932
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015701
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