Structural centrosome aberrations sensitize polarized epithelia to basal cell extrusion.
Olivier GanierDominik SchnerchErich A NiggPublished in: Open biology (2019)
Centrosome aberrations disrupt tissue architecture and may confer invasive properties to cancer cells. Here we show that structural centrosome aberrations, induced by overexpression of either Ninein-like protein (NLP) or CEP131/AZI1, sensitize polarized mammalian epithelia to basal cell extrusion. While unperturbed epithelia typically dispose of damaged cells through apical dissemination into luminal cavities, certain oncogenic mutations cause a switch in directionality towards basal cell extrusion, raising the potential for metastatic cell dissemination. Here we report that NLP-induced centrosome aberrations trigger the preferential extrusion of damaged cells towards the basal surface of epithelial monolayers. This switch in directionality from apical to basal dissemination coincides with a profound reorganization of the microtubule cytoskeleton, which in turn prevents the contractile ring repositioning that is required to support extrusion towards the apical surface. While the basal extrusion of cells harbouring NLP-induced centrosome aberrations requires exogenously induced cell damage, structural centrosome aberrations induced by excess CEP131 trigger the spontaneous dissemination of dying cells towards the basal surface from MDCK cysts. Thus, similar to oncogenic mutations, structural centrosome aberrations can favour basal extrusion of damaged cells from polarized epithelia. Assuming that additional mutations may promote cell survival, this process could sensitize epithelia to disseminate potentially metastatic cells.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- single cell
- copy number
- cell therapy
- small cell lung cancer
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- stem cells
- diabetic rats
- transcription factor
- high glucose
- signaling pathway
- skeletal muscle
- drug induced
- endothelial cells
- climate change
- fluorescent probe
- genome wide
- living cells
- single molecule