Liver cancer remains difficult to treat due to a paucity of drugs that target critical dependencies 1,2 and broad spectrum kinase inhibitors like sorafenib provide only modest benefit to hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients 3 . Induction of senescence may represent a promising strategy for the treatment of cancer, especially when such pro-senescence therapy is combined with a second drug Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:
Highlights d Cohesion loss is a common feature of cancer cells d DNA replication stress induces cohesion loss d The cohesin remover WAPL is essential in replication stress conditions d WAPL promotes repair and restart of a broken replication fork
In cancer cells, loss of G1/S control is often accompanied by p53 pathway inactivation, the latter usually rationalized as a necessity for suppressing cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. However, we found an unanticipated effect of p53 loss in mouse and human G1-checkpoint-deficient cells: reduction of DNA damage. We show that abrogation of the G1/S-checkpoint allowed cells to enter S-phase under growth-restricting conditions at the expense of severe replication stress manifesting as decelerated DNA replication, reduced origin firing and accumulation of DNA double-strand breaks. In this system, loss of p53 allowed mitogen-independent proliferation, not by suppressing apoptosis, but rather by restoring origin firing and reducing DNA breakage. Loss of G1/S control also caused DNA damage and activation of p53 in an in vivo retinoblastoma model. Moreover, in a teratoma model, loss of p53 reduced DNA breakage. Thus, loss of p53 may promote growth of incipient cancer cells by reducing replication-stress-induced DNA damage.
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