
The ‘Hail Mary’ mechanism can rescue the cells with severely damaged chromosomes and insights into this method could lead to new cancer therapies, shows study. It reveal new aspects of a remarkable mechanism that carries broken chromosomes through the process of cell division so that they can be repaired and function normally in the daughter cells.
‘The compactness of chromosomes plays an important role in helping to organise genetic material during cell division and enabling it to fit inside structures such as the nucleus of a cell.’
But Sullivan has found that the cell still has one more trick up its sleeve to rescue the broken chromosome. Sullivan has been studying this process in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. His lab has created a strain of flies in which broken chromosomes are common due to the expression of a DNA-cutting enzyme. “We have flies in which 80 percent of the cells have double-strand breaks in the DNA, and the flies are fine,” he said.
“The cell has this amazing mechanism, like a Hail Mary pass with time running out.” The mechanism involves the creation of a DNA tether which acts as a lifeline to keep the broken fragment connected to the chromosome. Powerful new microscopy techniques enable researchers to observe the whole process in living cells, with bright fluorescent tags highlighting the chromosomes and other cellular components. When a cell divides, it duplicates its chromosomes to make one set for each of the daughter cells. The membrane around the nucleus, which keeps the chromosomes separate from the rest of the cell, breaks down. The two sets of chromosomes then line up and segregate to opposite sides of the cell, pulled apart by a structure of microtubules called the spindle.
A new nuclear envelope forms around each set of chromosomes, and new cell membranes separate the two daughter cells. Sullivan’s research showed that chromosome fragments don’t segregate with the rest of the chromosomes, but get pulled in later just before the newly forming nuclear membrane closes. “The DNA tether seems to keep the nuclear envelope from closing, and then the chromosome fragment just glides right in at the last moment,” Sullivan said. If this mechanism fails, however, and the chromosome fragment gets left outside the nucleus, the consequences are dire.
The fragment forms a “micronucleus” with its own membrane and becomes prone to extensive rearrangements of its genetic material, which can then be reincorporated into chromosomes during the next cell division. Micronuclei and genetic rearrangements are commonly seen in cancer cells. “We want to understand the mechanism that keeps that from happening,” Sullivan said. “We are currently identifying the genes responsible for generating the DNA tether, which could be promising novel targets for the next generation of cancer therapies.” The study is published in the Journal of Cell Biology.
Source: ANI