نتایج جستجو برای: aneuploidy

تعداد نتایج: 5510  

2015
Ailsa Bennett Beatrice Bechi Anthony Tighe Sarah Thompson David J. Procter Stephen S. Taylor

Aneuploidy is a common feature of cancer, with human solid tumour cells typically harbouring abnormal chromosome complements. The aneuploidy observed in cancer is often caused by a chromosome instability phenotype, resulting in genomic heterogeneity. However, the role aneuploidy and chromosome instability play in tumour evolution and chemotherapy response remains poorly understood. In some cont...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2007
Yuri B. Yurov Ivan Y. Iourov Svetlana G. Vorsanova Thomas Liehr Alexei D. Kolotii Sergei I. Kutsev Franck Pellestor Alfia K. Beresheva Irina A. Demidova Viktor S. Kravets Viktor V. Monakhov Ilia V. Soloviev

BACKGROUND Understanding the mechanisms underlying generation of neuronal variability and complexity remains the central challenge for neuroscience. Structural variation in the neuronal genome is likely to be one important mechanism for neuronal diversity and brain diseases. Large-scale genomic variations due to loss or gain of whole chromosomes (aneuploidy) have been described in cells of the ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2001
S K Rehen M J McConnell D Kaushal M A Kingsbury A H Yang J Chun

A basic assumption about the normal nervous system is that its neurons possess identical genomes. Here we present direct evidence for genomic variability, manifested as chromosomal aneuploidy, among developing and mature neurons. Analysis of mouse embryonic cerebral cortical neuroblasts in situ detected lagging chromosomes during mitosis, suggesting the normal generation of aneuploidy in these ...

2015
Delphine Gogendeau Katarzyna Siudeja Davide Gambarotto Carole Pennetier Allison J. Bardin Renata Basto

Aneuploidy is associated with a variety of diseases such as cancer and microcephaly. Although many studies have addressed the consequences of a non-euploid genome in cells, little is known about their overall consequences in tissue and organism development. Here we use two different mutant conditions to address the consequences of aneuploidy during tissue development and homeostasis in Drosophi...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011
Jewel Daniel Jonathan Coulter Ju-Hyung Woo Kathleen Wilsbach Edward Gabrielson

Most human cancers are aneuploid and have chromosomal instability, which contrasts to the inability of human cells to normally tolerate aneuploidy. Noting that aneuploidy in human breast cancer correlates with increased expression levels of the Mps1 checkpoint gene, we investigated whether these high levels of Mps1 contribute to the ability of breast cancer cells to tolerate this aneuploidy. Re...

2015
Benjamin Resio David Pellman

| Genetic instability, which includes both numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities, is a hallmark of cancer. Whereas the structural chromosome rearrangements have received substantial attention, the role of whole-chromosome aneuploidy in cancer is much less well-understood. Here we review recent progress in understanding the roles of whole-chromosome aneuploidy in cancer, including t...

2014
Ana B. Oromendia Angelika Amon

It has long been appreciated that aneuploidy - in which cells possess a karyotype that is not a multiple of the haploid complement - has a substantial impact on human health, but its effects at the subcellular level have only recently become a focus of investigation. Here, we summarize new findings characterizing the impact of aneuploidy on protein quality control. Because aneuploidy has been a...

2010
Arturo Araujo Peter J. Bentley Buzz Baum

The role of aneuploidy (the cellular state of having an abnormal number of chromosomes) in cancer is not well understood. A recent theory suggests that aneuploidy may be an initial step towards the generation of variation in cancer. This theory however is very difficult to test in biological experiments. To address this theory and explore the role that aneuploidy has on the development of cance...

Journal: :Science 2011
Jason M Sheltzer Heidi M Blank Sarah J Pfau Yoshie Tange Benson M George Timothy J Humpton Ilana L Brito Yasushi Hiraoka Osami Niwa Angelika Amon

Aneuploidy decreases cellular fitness, yet it is also associated with cancer, a disease of enhanced proliferative capacity. To investigate one mechanism by which aneuploidy could contribute to tumorigenesis, we examined the effects of aneuploidy on genomic stability. We analyzed 13 budding yeast strains that carry extra copies of single chromosomes and found that all aneuploid strains exhibited...

2012
Kyung J. Kwon-Chung Yun C. Chang

Genomic imbalance resulting from aneuploidy is detrimental to the proliferation of cells in conditions suitable for normal growth and differentiation [1,2]. However, there is growing evidence that aneuploidy confers a significant growth advantage when cells undergo severe genetic or environmental perturbations [3–6]. For example, aneuploidy restored the ability to proliferate in yeast cells tha...

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