Chromosomal instability drives metastasis through a cytosolic DNA response.

Journal: Nature
Published:
Abstract

Chromosomal instability is a hallmark of cancer that results from ongoing errors in chromosome segregation during mitosis. Although chromosomal instability is a major driver of tumour evolution, its role in metastasis has not been established. Here we show that chromosomal instability promotes metastasis by sustaining a tumour cell-autonomous response to cytosolic DNA. Errors in chromosome segregation create a preponderance of micronuclei whose rupture spills genomic DNA into the cytosol. This leads to the activation of the cGAS-STING (cyclic GMP-AMP synthase-stimulator of interferon genes) cytosolic DNA-sensing pathway and downstream noncanonical NF-κB signalling. Genetic suppression of chromosomal instability markedly delays metastasis even in highly aneuploid tumour models, whereas continuous chromosome segregation errors promote cellular invasion and metastasis in a STING-dependent manner. By subverting lethal epithelial responses to cytosolic DNA, chromosomally unstable tumour cells co-opt chronic activation of innate immune pathways to spread to distant organs.

Authors
Samuel Bakhoum, Bryan Ngo, Ashley Laughney, Julie-ann Cavallo, Charles Murphy, Peter Ly, Pragya Shah, Roshan Sriram, Thomas B Watkins, Neil Taunk, Mercedes Duran, Chantal Pauli, Christine Shaw, Kalyani Chadalavada, Vinagolu Rajasekhar, Giulio Genovese, Subramanian Venkatesan, Nicolai Birkbak, Nicholas Mcgranahan, Mark Lundquist, Quincey Laplant, John Healey, Olivier Elemento, Christine Chung, Nancy Lee, Marcin Imielenski, Gouri Nanjangud, Dana Pe'er, Don Cleveland, Simon Powell, Jan Lammerding, Charles Swanton, Lewis Cantley
Relevant Conditions

Brain Tumor, Breast Cancer