Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
p16INK4a Prevents Centrosome Dysfunction and Genomic Instability in Primary Cells
Kimberly M. McDermott, Jianmin Zhang, Charles R. Holst, B. Krystyna Kozakiewicz, Veena Singla, Thea D. Tlsty
PLoS Biology · 2006 · ▲ 122 citations
Abstract
Aneuploidy, frequently observed in premalignant lesions, disrupts gene dosage and contributes to neoplastic progression. Theodor Boveri hypothesized nearly 100 years ago that aneuploidy was due to an increase in centrosome number (multipolar mitoses) and the resultant abnormal segregation of chromosomes. We performed immunocytochemistry, quantitative immunofluorescence, karyotypic analysis, and time-lapse microscopy on primary human diploid epithelial cells and fibroblasts to better understand the mechanism involved in the production of supernumerary centrosomes (more than two microtubule nucleating bodies) to directly demonstrate that the presence of supernumerary centrosomes in genomically intact cells generates aneuploid daughter cells. We show that loss of p16(INK4a) generates supernumerary centrosomes through centriole pair splitting. Generation of supernumerary centrosomes in human diploid epithelial cells was shown to nucleate multipolar spindles and directly drive production of aneuploid daughter cells as a result of unequal segregation of the genomic material during mitosis. Finally, we demonstrate that p16(INK4a) cooperates with p21 through regulation of cyclin-dependent kinase activity to prevent centriole pair splitting. Cells with loss of p16(INK4a) activity have been found in vivo in histologically normal mammary tissue from a substantial fraction of healthy, disease-free women. Demonstration of centrosome dysfunction in cells due to loss of p16(INK4a) suggests that, under the appropriate conditions, these cells can become aneuploid. Gain or loss of genomic material (aneuploidy) may provide the necessary proproliferation and antiapoptotic mechanisms needed for the earliest stages of tumorigenesis.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1371/journal.pbio.0040051
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-09 MST
Cite this
APA
McDermott, K.M., Zhang, J., Holst, C.R., Kozakiewicz, B.K., Singla, V., & Tlsty, T.D. (2006). p16INK4a Prevents Centrosome Dysfunction and Genomic Instability in Primary Cells. <em>PLoS Biology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0040051
Vancouver
McDermott KM, Zhang J, Holst CR, Kozakiewicz BK, Singla V, Tlsty TD. p16INK4a Prevents Centrosome Dysfunction and Genomic Instability in Primary Cells. PLoS Biology. 2006. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0040051.
BibTeX
@article{kimberly2006pINKaP,
title = {p16INK4a Prevents Centrosome Dysfunction and Genomic Instability in Primary Cells},
author = {Kimberly M. McDermott and Jianmin Zhang and Charles R. Holst and B. Krystyna Kozakiewicz and Veena Singla and Thea D. Tlsty},
journal = {PLoS Biology},
year = {2006},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pbio.0040051},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
HEC Forum 2022
Preprint · OA
Aging, Equality and the Human Healthspan
Gastroenterology 2016
Citation only
Rome IV—Functional GI Disorders: Disorders of Gut-Brain Interaction
Microcirculation 2018
Open access · OA
The role of senescence, telomere dysfunction and shelterin in vascular aging
Cell Reports 2017
Open access · CC-BY
Integrin Beta 3 Regulates Cellular Senescence by Activating the TGF-β Pathway
Endocrinology 2001
Citation only
Developmental Exposure to Estrogens Alters Epithelial Cell Adhesion and Gap Junction Proteins in the Adult Rat Prostate
PLoS ONE 2011
Open access · CC-BY