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Genome amplification and cellular senescence are hallmarks of human placenta development

Genome amplification and cellular senescence are commonly associated with pathological processes. While physiological roles for polyploidization and senescence have been described in mouse development, controversy exists over their significance in humans. Here, we describe tetraploidization and sene...

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Autores principales: Velicky, Philipp, Meinhardt, Gudrun, Plessl, Kerstin, Vondra, Sigrid, Weiss, Tamara, Haslinger, Peter, Lendl, Thomas, Aumayr, Karin, Mairhofer, Mario, Zhu, Xiaowei, Schütz, Birgit, Hannibal, Roberta L., Lindau, Robert, Weil, Beatrix, Ernerudh, Jan, Neesen, Jürgen, Egger, Gerda, Mikula, Mario, Röhrl, Clemens, Urban, Alexander E., Baker, Julie, Knöfler, Martin, Pollheimer, Jürgen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6200260/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30312291
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007698
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author Velicky, Philipp
Meinhardt, Gudrun
Plessl, Kerstin
Vondra, Sigrid
Weiss, Tamara
Haslinger, Peter
Lendl, Thomas
Aumayr, Karin
Mairhofer, Mario
Zhu, Xiaowei
Schütz, Birgit
Hannibal, Roberta L.
Lindau, Robert
Weil, Beatrix
Ernerudh, Jan
Neesen, Jürgen
Egger, Gerda
Mikula, Mario
Röhrl, Clemens
Urban, Alexander E.
Baker, Julie
Knöfler, Martin
Pollheimer, Jürgen
author_facet Velicky, Philipp
Meinhardt, Gudrun
Plessl, Kerstin
Vondra, Sigrid
Weiss, Tamara
Haslinger, Peter
Lendl, Thomas
Aumayr, Karin
Mairhofer, Mario
Zhu, Xiaowei
Schütz, Birgit
Hannibal, Roberta L.
Lindau, Robert
Weil, Beatrix
Ernerudh, Jan
Neesen, Jürgen
Egger, Gerda
Mikula, Mario
Röhrl, Clemens
Urban, Alexander E.
Baker, Julie
Knöfler, Martin
Pollheimer, Jürgen
author_sort Velicky, Philipp
collection PubMed
description Genome amplification and cellular senescence are commonly associated with pathological processes. While physiological roles for polyploidization and senescence have been described in mouse development, controversy exists over their significance in humans. Here, we describe tetraploidization and senescence as phenomena of normal human placenta development. During pregnancy, placental extravillous trophoblasts (EVTs) invade the pregnant endometrium, termed decidua, to establish an adapted microenvironment required for the developing embryo. This process is critically dependent on continuous cell proliferation and differentiation, which is thought to follow the classical model of cell cycle arrest prior to terminal differentiation. Strikingly, flow cytometry and DNAseq revealed that EVT formation is accompanied with a genome-wide polyploidization, independent of mitotic cycles. DNA replication in these cells was analysed by a fluorescent cell-cycle indicator reporter system, cell cycle marker expression and EdU incorporation. Upon invasion into the decidua, EVTs widely lose their replicative potential and enter a senescent state characterized by high senescence-associated (SA) β-galactosidase activity, induction of a SA secretory phenotype as well as typical metabolic alterations. Furthermore, we show that the shift from endocycle-dependent genome amplification to growth arrest is disturbed in androgenic complete hydatidiform moles (CHM), a hyperplastic pregnancy disorder associated with increased risk of developing choriocarinoma. Senescence is decreased in CHM-EVTs, accompanied by exacerbated endoreduplication and hyperploidy. We propose induction of cellular senescence as a ploidy-limiting mechanism during normal human placentation and unravel a link between excessive polyploidization and reduced senescence in CHM.
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spelling pubmed-62002602018-11-19 Genome amplification and cellular senescence are hallmarks of human placenta development Velicky, Philipp Meinhardt, Gudrun Plessl, Kerstin Vondra, Sigrid Weiss, Tamara Haslinger, Peter Lendl, Thomas Aumayr, Karin Mairhofer, Mario Zhu, Xiaowei Schütz, Birgit Hannibal, Roberta L. Lindau, Robert Weil, Beatrix Ernerudh, Jan Neesen, Jürgen Egger, Gerda Mikula, Mario Röhrl, Clemens Urban, Alexander E. Baker, Julie Knöfler, Martin Pollheimer, Jürgen PLoS Genet Research Article Genome amplification and cellular senescence are commonly associated with pathological processes. While physiological roles for polyploidization and senescence have been described in mouse development, controversy exists over their significance in humans. Here, we describe tetraploidization and senescence as phenomena of normal human placenta development. During pregnancy, placental extravillous trophoblasts (EVTs) invade the pregnant endometrium, termed decidua, to establish an adapted microenvironment required for the developing embryo. This process is critically dependent on continuous cell proliferation and differentiation, which is thought to follow the classical model of cell cycle arrest prior to terminal differentiation. Strikingly, flow cytometry and DNAseq revealed that EVT formation is accompanied with a genome-wide polyploidization, independent of mitotic cycles. DNA replication in these cells was analysed by a fluorescent cell-cycle indicator reporter system, cell cycle marker expression and EdU incorporation. Upon invasion into the decidua, EVTs widely lose their replicative potential and enter a senescent state characterized by high senescence-associated (SA) β-galactosidase activity, induction of a SA secretory phenotype as well as typical metabolic alterations. Furthermore, we show that the shift from endocycle-dependent genome amplification to growth arrest is disturbed in androgenic complete hydatidiform moles (CHM), a hyperplastic pregnancy disorder associated with increased risk of developing choriocarinoma. Senescence is decreased in CHM-EVTs, accompanied by exacerbated endoreduplication and hyperploidy. We propose induction of cellular senescence as a ploidy-limiting mechanism during normal human placentation and unravel a link between excessive polyploidization and reduced senescence in CHM. Public Library of Science 2018-10-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6200260/ /pubmed/30312291 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007698 Text en © 2018 Velicky 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Velicky, Philipp
Meinhardt, Gudrun
Plessl, Kerstin
Vondra, Sigrid
Weiss, Tamara
Haslinger, Peter
Lendl, Thomas
Aumayr, Karin
Mairhofer, Mario
Zhu, Xiaowei
Schütz, Birgit
Hannibal, Roberta L.
Lindau, Robert
Weil, Beatrix
Ernerudh, Jan
Neesen, Jürgen
Egger, Gerda
Mikula, Mario
Röhrl, Clemens
Urban, Alexander E.
Baker, Julie
Knöfler, Martin
Pollheimer, Jürgen
Genome amplification and cellular senescence are hallmarks of human placenta development
title Genome amplification and cellular senescence are hallmarks of human placenta development
title_full Genome amplification and cellular senescence are hallmarks of human placenta development
title_fullStr Genome amplification and cellular senescence are hallmarks of human placenta development
title_full_unstemmed Genome amplification and cellular senescence are hallmarks of human placenta development
title_short Genome amplification and cellular senescence are hallmarks of human placenta development
title_sort genome amplification and cellular senescence are hallmarks of human placenta development
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6200260/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30312291
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007698
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