A p53-dependent response limits the viability of mammalian haploid cells.

Authors:
Olbrich T, Mayor-Ruiz C, Vega-Sendino M, Gomez C, Ortega S, Ruiz S, Fernandez-Capetillo O.
In:
Source: Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
Publication Date: (2017)
Issue: 114(35): 9367-9372
Research Area:
Stem Cells
Gene Expression
Toxicology
Cells used in publication:
HAP-1
Species: human
Tissue Origin: blood
Platform:
Nucleofector® I/II/2b
Experiment

To generate P53-deficient HAP1 cells, we used the Amaxa® Nucleofector kit (Reactive L, X-001 program) and transfected 5x105 cells with 10 µg of pX330-sgRNA-p53
plasmid.

Abstract

The recent development of haploid cell lines has facilitated forward genetic screenings in mammalian cells. These lines include near-haploid human cell lines isolated from a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia (KBM7 and HAP1), as well as haploid embryonic stem cells derived from several organisms. In all cases, haploidy was shown to be an unstable state, so that cultures of mammalian haploid cells rapidly become enriched in diploids. Here we show that the observed diploidization is due to a proliferative disadvantage of haploid cells compared with diploid cells. Accordingly, single-cell-sorted haploid mammalian cells maintain the haploid state for prolonged periods, owing to the absence of competing diploids. Although the duration of interphase is similar in haploid and diploid cells, haploid cells spend longer in mitosis, indicative of problems in chromosome segregation. In agreement with this, a substantial proportion of the haploids die at or shortly after the last mitosis through activation of a p53-dependent cytotoxic response. Finally, we show that p53 deletion stabilizes haploidy in human HAP1 cells and haploid mouse embryonic stem cells. We propose that, similar to aneuploidy or tetraploidy, haploidy triggers a p53-dependent response that limits the fitness of mammalian cells.