Activation of the endomitotic spindle assembly checkpoint and thrombocytopenia in Plk1-deficient mice

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Abstract

Polyploidization in megakaryocytes is achieved by endomitosis, a specialized cell cycle in which DNA replication is followed by aberrant mitosis. Typical mitotic regulators such as Aurora kinases or Cdk1 are dispensable for megakaryocyte maturation, and inhibition of mitotic kinases may in fact promote megakaryocyte maturation. However, we show here that Polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) is required for endomitosis, and ablation of the Plk1 gene in megakaryocytes results in defective polyploidization accompanied by mitotic arrest and cell death. Lack of Plk1 results in defective centrosome maturation and aberrant spindle pole formation, thus impairing the formation of multiple poles typically found in megakaryocytes. Intheseconditions,megakaryocytesarrestforalongtimeinmitosisandfrequently die. Mitotic arrest in wild-typemegakaryocytes treated with Plk1 inhibitors or Plk1-null cells is triggered by the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC), and can be rescued in the presence of SAC inhibitors. These data suggest that, despite the dispensability of proper chromosomesegregation in megakaryocytes, an endomitotic SAC is activated in these cells uponPlk1 inhibition. SAC activation results in defectivematuration of megakaryocytes and cell death, thus raising a note of caution in the use of Plk1 inhibitors in therapeutic strategies based on polyploidization regulators.

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Trakala, M., Partida, D., Salazar-Roa, M., Maroto, M., Wachowicz, P., De Cárcer, G., & Malumbres, M. (2015). Activation of the endomitotic spindle assembly checkpoint and thrombocytopenia in Plk1-deficient mice. Blood, 126(14), 1707–1714. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2015-03-634402

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