Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2176545 Developmental Cell 2015 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Ablation of Cdc20 compromises endomitosis during megakaryocyte polyploidization•Megakaryocytes can generate platelets in the absence of endomitosis•Cdk2 is essential to prevent re-replication in the absence of Cdk1 in vivo•Different polyploidization mechanisms are functionally interchangeable

SummaryPolyploidization is a natural process that frequently accompanies differentiation; its deregulation is linked to genomic instability and cancer. Despite its relevance, why cells select different polyploidization mechanisms is unknown. Here we report a systematic genetic analysis of endomitosis, a process in which megakaryocytes become polyploid by entering mitosis but aborting anaphase. Whereas ablation of the APC/C cofactor Cdc20 results in mitotic arrest and severe thrombocytopenia, lack of the kinases Aurora-B, Cdk1, or Cdk2 does not affect megakaryocyte polyploidization or platelet levels. Ablation of Cdk1 forces a switch to endocycles without mitosis, whereas polyploidization in the absence of Cdk1 and Cdk2 occurs in the presence of aberrant re-replication events. Importantly, ablation of these kinases rescues the defects in Cdc20 null megakaryocytes. These findings suggest that endomitosis can be functionally replaced by alternative polyploidization mechanisms in vivo and provide the cellular basis for therapeutic approaches aimed to discriminate mitotic and polyploid cells.

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Cell Biology
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