Litcius/Paper detail

Cell cycle responses to Topoisomerase II inhibition: Molecular mechanisms and clinical implications

Tanya Soliman, Daniel Keifenheim, Peter J. Parker, Duncan J. Clarke

2023The Journal of Cell Biology26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

DNA Topoisomerase IIA (Topo IIA) is an enzyme that alters the topological state of DNA and is essential for the separation of replicated sister chromatids and the integrity of cell division. Topo IIA dysfunction activates cell cycle checkpoints, resulting in arrest in either the G2-phase or metaphase of mitosis, ultimately triggering the abscission checkpoint if non-disjunction persists. These events, which directly or indirectly monitor the activity of Topo IIA, have become of major interest as many cancers have deficiencies in Topoisomerase checkpoints, leading to genome instability. Recent studies into how cells sense Topo IIA dysfunction and respond by regulating cell cycle progression demonstrate that the Topo IIA G2 checkpoint is distinct from the G2-DNA damage checkpoint. Likewise, in mitosis, the metaphase Topo IIA checkpoint is separate from the spindle assembly checkpoint. Here, we integrate mechanistic knowledge of Topo IIA checkpoints with the current understanding of how cells regulate progression through the cell cycle to accomplish faithful genome transmission and discuss the opportunities this offers for therapy.

Topics & Concepts

Spindle checkpointG2-M DNA damage checkpointCell cycle checkpointMitosisSister chromatidsCell cycleTopoisomeraseBiologyCell biologyMetaphaseCHEK1DNA damageSpindle apparatusCancer researchCell divisionGeneticsCellDNAChromosomeGeneCancer therapeutics and mechanismsDNA Repair MechanismsMicrotubule and mitosis dynamics