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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

P2P-R protein overexpression restricts mitotic progression at prometaphase and promotes mitotic apoptosis.

Mitotic cells show a tenfold increase in immunoreactive P2P-R protein. During mitosis, the distribution of P2P-R protein also changes from a primary nucleolar localization in interphase cells to the periphery of chromosome in mitotic cells. These findings suggest that P2P-R might serve a functional role in mitosis. To test this possibility, human Saos2 cells were stably transfected with P2P-R DNA constructs and the biological effects of P2P-R overexpression were evaluated. Overexpression of near full-length P2P-R was found to have paradoxical effects on the relationship between proliferation and mitosis in the nine Saos2 cell clones that were studied. A significant repression in the population doubling rates was observed in all nine clones even though a significant increase in the frequency of easily detached cells with a mitotic morphology was apparent. Flow cytometric analysis confirmed that greater than two thirds of the cells with a mitotic morphology had a 4n DNA content. Confocal microscopy further established that 85% of the mitotic cell population had prometaphase characteristics suggesting that P2P-R overexpression restricts mitotic progression at prometaphase. Many cells with a mitotic morphology also showed signs of apoptosis with prominent cell surface blebs. Confocal microscopy confirmed that 25-40% of such mitotic cells were apoptotic with chromosomal abnormalities and cell surface blebbing. In association with mitotic apoptosis, P2P-R protein appears to dissociate from the periphery of chromosomes and localize in the cytoplasm and in cell surface blebs. The presence of P2P-R in cell surface blebs was confirmed by analysis of highly enriched populations of apoptotic cell surface blebs wherein Western blotting documented the presence of 250 kDa P2P-R. These results therefore suggest that P2P-R overexpression promotes both prometaphase arrest in mitosis and mitotic apoptosis.[1]

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