Jump to content

Immortal DNA strand hypothesis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Immortal strand hypothesis)

The immortal DNA strand hypothesis was proposed in 1975 by John Cairns as a mechanism for adult stem cells to minimize mutations in their genomes.[1] This hypothesis proposes that instead of segregating their DNA during mitosis in a random manner, adult stem cells divide their DNA asymmetrically, and retain a distinct template set of DNA strands (parental strands) in each division. By retaining the same set of template DNA strands, adult stem cells would pass mutations arising from errors in DNA replication on to non-stem cell daughters that soon terminally differentiate (end mitotic divisions and become a functional cell). Passing on these replication errors would allow adult stem cells to reduce their rate of accumulation of mutations that could lead to serious genetic disorders such as cancer.

Although evidence for this mechanism exists, whether it is a mechanism acting in adult stem cells in vivo is still controversial.

Methods

[edit]

Two main assays are used to detect immortal DNA strand segregation: label-retention and label-release pulse/chase assays.

In the label-retention assay, the goal is to mark 'immortal' or parental DNA strands with a DNA label such as tritiated thymidine or bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU). These types of DNA labels will incorporate into the newly synthesized DNA of dividing cells during S phase. A pulse of DNA label is given to adult stem cells under conditions where they have not yet delineated an immortal DNA strand. During these conditions, the adult stem cells are either dividing symmetrically (thus with each division a new 'immortal' strand is determined and in at least one of the stem cells the immortal DNA strand will be marked with DNA label), or the adult stem cells have not yet been determined (thus their precursors are dividing symmetrically, and once they differentiate into adult stem cells and choose an 'immortal' strand, the 'immortal strand' will already have been marked). Experimentally, adult stem cells are undergoing symmetric divisions during growth and after wound healing, and are not yet determined at neonatal stages. Once the immortal DNA strand is labelled and the adult stem cell has begun or resumed asymmetric divisions, the DNA label is chased out. In symmetric divisions (most mitotic cells), DNA is segregating randomly and the DNA label will be diluted out to levels below detection after five divisions. If, however, cells are using an immortal DNA strand mechanism, then all the labeled DNA will continue to co-segregate with the adult stem cell, and after five (or more) divisions will still be detected within the adult stem cell. These cells are sometimes called label-retaining cells (LRCs).

In the label-release assay, the goal is to mark the newly synthesized DNA that is normally passed on to the daughter (non-stem) cell. A pulse of DNA label is given to adult stem cells under conditions where they are dividing asymmetrically. Under conditions of homeostasis, adult stem cells should be dividing asymmetrically so that the same number of adult stem cells is maintained in the tissue compartment. After pulsing for long enough to label all the newly replicated DNA, the DNA label is chased out (each DNA replication now incorporates unlabeled nucleotides) and the adult stem cells are assayed for loss of the DNA label after two cell divisions. If cells are using a random segregation mechanism, then enough DNA label should remain in the cell to be detected. If, however, the adult stem cells are using an immortal DNA strand mechanism, they are obligated to retain the unlabeled 'immortal' DNA, and will release all the newly synthesized labeled DNA to their differentiating daughter cells in two divisions.

Some scientists have combined the two approaches,[2][3] by first using one DNA label to label the immortal strands, allowing to adult stem cells to begin dividing asymmetrically, and then using a different DNA label to label the newly synthesized DNA. Thus, the adult stem cells will retain one DNA label and release the other within two divisions.

Evidence

[edit]

Evidence for the immortal DNA strand hypothesis has been found in various systems. One of the earliest studies by Karl Lark et al. demonstrated co-segregation of DNA in the cells of plant root tips.[4] Plant root tips labeled with tritiated thymidine tended to segregate their labeled DNA to the same daughter cell. Though not all the labeled DNA segregated to the same daughter, the amount of thymidine-labeled DNA seen in the daughter with less label corresponded to the amount that would have arisen from sister-chromatid exchange.[4] Later studies by Christopher Potten et al. (2002),[2] using pulse/chase experiments with tritiated thymidine, found long-term label-retaining cells in the small intestinal crypts of neonatal mice. These researchers hypothesized that long-term incorporation of tritiated thymidine occurred because neonatal mice have undeveloped small intestines, and that pulsing tritiated thymidine soon after the birth of the mice allowed the 'immortal' DNA of adult stem cells to be labeled during their formation. These long-term cells were demonstrated to be actively cycling, as demonstrated by incorporation and release of BrdU.[2]

Since these cells were cycling but continued to contain the BrdU label in their DNA, the researchers reasoned that they must be segregating their DNA using an immortal DNA strand mechanism. Joshua Merok et al. from the lab of James Sherley engineered mammalian cells with an inducible p53 gene that controls asymmetric divisions.[5] BrdU pulse/chase experiments with these cells demonstrated that chromosomes segregated non-randomly only when the cells were induced to divide asymmetrically like adult stem cells. These asymmetrically dividing cells provide an in vitro model for demonstration and investigation of immortal strand mechanisms.

Scientists have strived to demonstrate that this immortal DNA strand mechanism exists in vivo in other types of adult stem cells. In 1996 Nik Zeps published the first paper demonstrating label retaining cells were present in the mouse mammary gland[6] and this was confirmed in 2005 by Gilbert Smith who also published evidence that a subset of mouse mammary epithelial cells could retain DNA label and release DNA label in a manner consistent with the immortal DNA strand mechanism.[3] Soon after, scientists from the laboratory of Derek van der Kooy showed that mice have neural stem cells that are BrdU-retaining and continue to be mitotically active.[7] Asymmetric segregation of DNA was shown using real-time imaging of cells in culture. In 2006, scientists in the lab of Shahragim Tajbakhsh presented evidence that muscle satellite cells, which are proposed to be adult stem cells of the skeletal muscle compartment, exhibited asymmetric segregation of BrdU-labelled DNA when put into culture. They also had evidence that demonstrated BrdU release kinetics consistent with an immortal DNA strand mechanism were operating in vivo, using juvenile mice and mice with muscle regeneration induced by freezing.[8]

These experiments supporting the immortal strand hypothesis, however, are not conclusive. While the Lark experiments demonstrated co-segregation, the co-segregation may have been an artifact of radiation from the tritium. Although Potten identified the cycling, label-retaining cells as adult stem cells, these cells are difficult to identify unequivocally as adult stem cells. While the engineered cells provide an elegant model for co-segregation of chromosomes, studies with these cells were done in vitro with engineered cells. Some features may not be present in vivo or may be absent in vitro. In May 2007 evidence in support of the Immortal DNA Strand theory was discovered by Michael Conboy et al.,[9] using the muscle stem/satellite cell model during tissue regeneration, where there is tremendous cell division during a relatively brief period of time. Using two BrdU analogs to label template and newly synthesized DNA strands, they saw that about half of the dividing cells in regenerating muscle sort the older "Immortal" DNA to one daughter cell and the younger DNA to the other. In keeping with the stem cell hypothesis, the more undifferentiated daughter typically inherited the chromatids with the older DNA, while the more differentiated daughter inherited the younger DNA.

Experimental evidence against the immortal strand hypothesis is sparse. In one study, researchers incorporated tritiated thymidine into dividing murine epidermal basal cells.[10] They followed the release of tritiated thymidine after various chase periods, but the pattern of release was not consistent with the immortal strand hypothesis. Although they found label-retaining cells, they were not within the putative stem cell compartment. With increasing lengths of time for the chase periods, these label-retaining cells were located farther from the putative stem cell compartment, suggesting that the label-retaining cells had moved. However, finding conclusive evidence against the immortal strand hypothesis has proven difficult.

DNA template strand segregation was studied in the developing zebrafish.[11] During larval development there was rapid depletion of older DNA template strands from stem cell niches in the retina, brain and intestine.[11] Using high resolution microscopy, no evidence of asymmetric template strand segregation (in over 100 cell pairs) was found, making it improbable that in developing zebrafish asymmetric DNA segregation avoids mutational burden as proposed by the immortal strand hypothesis.[11]

Further models

[edit]

After Cairns first proposed the immortal DNA strand mechanism, the theory has undergone several updated refinements.

In 2002, he proposed that in addition to using immortal DNA strand mechanisms to segregate DNA, when the immortal DNA strands of adult stem cells undergo damage, they will choose to die (apoptose) rather than use DNA repair mechanisms that are normally used in non-stem cells.[12]

Emmanuel David Tannenbaum and James Sherley developed a quantitative model describing how repair of point mutations might differ in adult stem cells.[13] They found that in adult stem cells, repair was most efficient if they used an immortal DNA strand mechanism for segregating DNA, rather than a random segregation mechanism. This method would be beneficial because it avoids wrongly fixing DNA mutations in both DNA strands and propagating the mutation.

Mechanisms

[edit]

The complete proof of a concept generally requires a plausible mechanism that could mediate the effect. Although controversial, there is a suggestion that this could be provided by the Dynein Motor.[14] This paper is accompanied by a comment summarizing the findings and background.[15]

However, this work has highly respected biologists among its detractors as exemplified by a further comment on a paper by the same authors from 2006.[16] The authors have rebutted the criticism.[17]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Cairns, John (1975). "Mutation selection and the natural history of cancer". Nature. 255 (5505): 197–200. Bibcode:1975Natur.255..197C. doi:10.1038/255197a0. PMID 1143315. S2CID 4216433.
  2. ^ a b c Potten, C. S.; Owen, G.; Booth, D. (2002). "Intestinal stem cells protect their genome by selective segregation of template DNA strands". Journal of Cell Science. 115 (Pt 11): 2381–8. doi:10.1242/jcs.115.11.2381. PMID 12006622.
  3. ^ a b Smith, G. H. (2005). "Label-retaining epithelial cells in mouse mammary gland divide asymmetrically and retain their template DNA strands". Development. 132 (4): 681–687. doi:10.1242/dev.01609. PMID 15647322.
  4. ^ a b Lark, K. G. (1967). "Nonrandom segregation of sister chromatids in Vicia faba and Triticum boeoticum". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 58 (1): 352–359. Bibcode:1967PNAS...58..352L. doi:10.1073/pnas.58.1.352. PMC 335640. PMID 5231616.
  5. ^ Sherley, James L.; Tunstead, James R.; Lansita, Janice A.; Merok, Joshua R. (December 2002). "Cosegregation of Chromosomes Containing Immortal DNA Strands in Cells That Cycle with Asymmetric Stem Cell Kinetics". Cancer Research. 62 (23): 6791–6795. PMID 12460886.
  6. ^ Zeps, N.; Dawkins, H. J.; Papadimitriou, J. M.; Redmond, S. L.; Walters, M. I. (December 1996). "Detection of a population of long-lived cells in mammary epithelium of the mouse". Cell and Tissue Research. 286 (3): 525–536. doi:10.1007/s004410050722. ISSN 0302-766X. PMID 8929355. S2CID 29700312.
  7. ^ Karpowicz, Phillip; Morshead, Cindi; Kam, Angela; Jervis, Eric; Ramunas, John; Cheng, Vincent; Van Der Kooy, Derek (2005). "Support for the immortal strand hypothesis: Neural stem cells partition DNA asymmetrically in vitro". The Journal of Cell Biology. 170 (5): 721–732. doi:10.1083/jcb.200502073. PMC 2171352. PMID 16115957.
  8. ^ Shinin, Vasily; Gayraud-Morel, Barbara; Gomès, Danielle; Tajbakhsh, Shahragim (2006). "Asymmetric division and cosegregation of template DNA strands in adult muscle satellite cells". Nature Cell Biology. 8 (7): 677–682. doi:10.1038/ncb1425. PMID 16799552. S2CID 21495596.
  9. ^ Conboy, Michael J.; Karasov, Ariela O.; Rando, Thomas A. (2007). "High Incidence of Non-Random Template Strand Segregation and Asymmetric Fate Determination in Dividing Stem Cells and their Progeny". PLOS Biology. 5 (5): e102. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0050102. PMC 1852584. PMID 17439301.
  10. ^ Kuroki, Toshio; Murakami, Yoshinori (1989). "Random Segregation of DNA Strands in Epidermal Basal Cells". Japanese Journal of Cancer Research. 80 (7): 637–642. doi:10.1111/j.1349-7006.1989.tb01690.x. PMC 5917816. PMID 2507487.
  11. ^ a b c Glasauer SMK, Triemer T, Neef AB, Neuhauss SCF, Luedtke NW. DNA template strand segregation in developing zebrafish. Cell Chem Biol. 2021 Nov 18;28(11):1638-1647.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2021.09.001. Epub 2021 Sep 29. PMID 34592171
  12. ^ Cairns, J. (2002). "Somatic stem cells and the kinetics of mutagenesis and carcinogenesis". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 99 (16): 10567–10570. Bibcode:2002PNAS...9910567C. doi:10.1073/pnas.162369899. PMC 124976. PMID 12149477.
  13. ^ Tannenbaum, Emmanuel; Sherley, James L.; Shakhnovich, Eugene I. (2005). "Evolutionary dynamics of adult stem cells: Comparison of random and immortal-strand segregation mechanisms". Physical Review E. 71 (4): 041914. arXiv:q-bio/0411048. Bibcode:2005PhRvE..71d1914T. doi:10.1103/physreve.71.041914. PMID 15903708. S2CID 11529637.
  14. ^ Armakolas, A.; Klar, A. J. S. (2007). "Left-Right Dynein Motor Implicated in Selective Chromatid Segregation in Mouse Cells". Science. 315 (5808): 100–101. Bibcode:2007Sci...315..100A. doi:10.1126/science.1129429. PMID 17204651. S2CID 14884631.
  15. ^ Sapienza, Carmen (5 January 2007). "Do Watson and Crick Motor from X to Z?". Science. 315 (5808): 46–47. doi:10.1126/science.1137587. PMID 17204629. S2CID 45100452.
  16. ^ Haber, J. E. (2006). "Comment on "Cell Type Regulates Selective Segregation of Mouse Chromosome 7 DNA Strands in Mitosis"". Science. 313 (5790): 1045b. Bibcode:2006Sci...313.1045H. doi:10.1126/science.1127836. PMID 16931739.
  17. ^ Klar, Amar J. S.; Armakolas, Athanasios (25 August 2006). "Response to Comment on "Cell Type Regulates Selective Segregation of Mouse Chromosome 7 DNA Strands in Mitosis"". Science. 313 (5790): 1045. Bibcode:2006Sci...313.1045K. doi:10.1126/science.1128552. PMID 16931739.