TY - JOUR
T1 - Mosaic-variegated aneuploidy syndrome mutation or haploinsufficiency in Cep57 impairs tumor suppression
AU - Aziz, Khaled
AU - Sieben, Cynthia J.
AU - Jeganathan, Karthik B.
AU - Hamada, Masakazu
AU - Davies, Brian A.
AU - Fierro Velasco, Raul O.
AU - Rahman, Nazneen
AU - Katzmann, David J.
AU - Van Deursen, Jan M.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Ines Sturmlechner and Aml Banni for providing technical support. We thank Jennifer Westendorf and Jeffrey Salisbury for helpful discussion, Darren Baker and Somaira Nowsheen for critical discussions and feedback on the manuscript, and Joseph Grande for pathology evaluation. We thank the following scientists for providing reagents or antibodies: Sandra Hanks (MVA fibroblast lines), Ko Momotani (Cep57 C-terminus antibody and Cep57 plasmid), Laurence Pelletier (Cep192 antibody), Kunsoo Rhee (c-Nap1 antibody), and Andrew Holland (Plk4 antibody). This work was supported by NIH grant R01 CA126828 to J.M. van Deursen. The authors would like to acknowledge the Mayo Clinic School of Medicine and Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences for funding KA.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Society for Clinical Investigation. All rights reserved.
PY - 2018/8/1
Y1 - 2018/8/1
N2 - A homozygous truncating frameshift mutation in CEP57 (CEP57T/T) has been identified in a subset of mosaic-variegated aneuploidy (MVA) patients; however, the physiological roles of the centrosome-associated protein CEP57 that contribute to disease are unknown. To investigate these, we have generated a mouse model mimicking this disease mutation. Cep57T/T mice died within 24 hours after birth with short, curly tails and severely impaired vertebral ossification. Osteoblasts in lumbosacral vertebrae of Cep57T/T mice were deficient for Fgf2, a Cep57 binding partner implicated in diverse biological processes, including bone formation. Furthermore, a broad spectrum of tissues of Cep57T/T mice had severe aneuploidy at birth, consistent with the MVA patient phenotype. Cep57T/T mouse embryonic fibroblasts and patient-derived skin fibroblasts failed to undergo centrosome maturation in G2 phase, causing premature centriole disjunction, centrosome amplification, aberrant spindle formation, and high rates of chromosome missegregation. Mice heterozygous for the truncating frameshift mutation or a Cep57-null allele were overtly indistinguishable from WT mice despite reduced Cep57 protein levels, yet prone to aneuploidization and cancer, with tumors lacking evidence for loss of heterozygosity. This study identifies Cep57 as a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor with biologically diverse roles in centrosome maturation and Fgf2-mediated bone formation.
AB - A homozygous truncating frameshift mutation in CEP57 (CEP57T/T) has been identified in a subset of mosaic-variegated aneuploidy (MVA) patients; however, the physiological roles of the centrosome-associated protein CEP57 that contribute to disease are unknown. To investigate these, we have generated a mouse model mimicking this disease mutation. Cep57T/T mice died within 24 hours after birth with short, curly tails and severely impaired vertebral ossification. Osteoblasts in lumbosacral vertebrae of Cep57T/T mice were deficient for Fgf2, a Cep57 binding partner implicated in diverse biological processes, including bone formation. Furthermore, a broad spectrum of tissues of Cep57T/T mice had severe aneuploidy at birth, consistent with the MVA patient phenotype. Cep57T/T mouse embryonic fibroblasts and patient-derived skin fibroblasts failed to undergo centrosome maturation in G2 phase, causing premature centriole disjunction, centrosome amplification, aberrant spindle formation, and high rates of chromosome missegregation. Mice heterozygous for the truncating frameshift mutation or a Cep57-null allele were overtly indistinguishable from WT mice despite reduced Cep57 protein levels, yet prone to aneuploidization and cancer, with tumors lacking evidence for loss of heterozygosity. This study identifies Cep57 as a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor with biologically diverse roles in centrosome maturation and Fgf2-mediated bone formation.
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U2 - 10.1172/JCI120316
DO - 10.1172/JCI120316
M3 - Article
C2 - 30035751
AN - SCOPUS:85051255035
SN - 0021-9738
VL - 128
SP - 3517
EP - 3534
JO - Journal of Clinical Investigation
JF - Journal of Clinical Investigation
IS - 8
ER -