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Aneuploidy as a mechanism for stress-induced liver adaptation
Andrew W. Duncan, … , Arthur L. Beaudet, Markus Grompe
Andrew W. Duncan, … , Arthur L. Beaudet, Markus Grompe
Published August 6, 2012
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2012;122(9):3307-3315. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI64026.
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Research Article Hepatology Article has an altmetric score of 28

Aneuploidy as a mechanism for stress-induced liver adaptation

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Abstract

Over half of the mature hepatocytes in mice and humans are aneuploid and yet retain full ability to undergo mitosis. This observation has raised the question of whether this unusual somatic genetic variation evolved as an adaptive mechanism in response to hepatic injury. According to this model, hepatotoxic insults select for hepatocytes with specific numerical chromosome abnormalities, rendering them differentially resistant to injury. To test this hypothesis, we utilized a strain of mice heterozygous for a mutation in the homogentisic acid dioxygenase (Hgd) gene located on chromosome 16. Loss of the remaining Hgd allele protects from fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (Fah) deficiency, a genetic liver disease model. When adult mice heterozygous for Hgd and lacking Fah were exposed to chronic liver damage, injury-resistant nodules consisting of Hgd-null hepatocytes rapidly emerged. To determine whether aneuploidy played a role in this phenomenon, array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) and metaphase karyotyping were performed. Strikingly, loss of chromosome 16 was dramatically enriched in all mice that became completely resistant to tyrosinemia-induced hepatic injury. The frequency of chromosome 16–specific aneuploidy was approximately 50%. This result indicates that selection of a specific aneuploid karyotype can result in the adaptation of hepatocytes to chronic liver injury. The extent to which aneuploidy promotes hepatic adaptation in humans remains under investigation.

Authors

Andrew W. Duncan, Amy E. Hanlon Newell, Weimin Bi, Milton J. Finegold, Susan B. Olson, Arthur L. Beaudet, Markus Grompe

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Figure 5

Models of aneuploidy-mediated adaptation and hepatocyte expansion.

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Models of aneuploidy-mediated adaptation and hepatocyte expansion.
(A) M...
(A) Mechanism for adaptation to tryosinemia in Hgd+/–Fah–/– mice. Hgd heterozygotes have KO and WT alleles. Loss of WT Hgd promotes resistance to Fah deficiency and occurs by mutation of the WT allele, aneuploidy (i.e., loss chromosome 16 with the WT gene), or a combination of mutation and aneuploidy. Drawings represent diploid Fah–/– hepatocytes and illustrate chromosome 16 copy number and Hgd status. (B) Model showing hepatocyte adaptation in response to chronic liver injury. Early in life, livers are primarily diploid and have the expected numbers of chromosomes (single black nuclei). During aging, hepatocytes polyploidize (binucleated cells) and become aneuploid (red, blue, green nuclei). Random aneuploidy affects nearly half of hepatocytes in mice and humans. Chronic liver injury can have multiple effects leading to either hepatocellular carcinoma (cells with white nuclei) or expansion injury-resistant hepatocytes (cells with red nuclei).

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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