On the road to cancer: aneuploidy and the mitotic checkpoint

GJPL Kops, BAA Weaver, DW Cleveland - Nature Reviews Cancer, 2005 - nature.com
GJPL Kops, BAA Weaver, DW Cleveland
Nature Reviews Cancer, 2005nature.com
Abnormal chromosome content—also known as aneuploidy—is the most common
characteristic of human solid tumours. It has therefore been proposed that aneuploidy
contributes to, or even drives, tumour development. The mitotic checkpoint guards against
chromosome mis-segregation by delaying cell-cycle progression through mitosis until all
chromosomes have successfully made spindle-microtubule attachments. Defects in the
mitotic checkpoint generate aneuploidy and might facilitate tumorigenesis, but more severe …
Abstract
Abnormal chromosome content — also known as aneuploidy — is the most common characteristic of human solid tumours. It has therefore been proposed that aneuploidy contributes to, or even drives, tumour development. The mitotic checkpoint guards against chromosome mis-segregation by delaying cell-cycle progression through mitosis until all chromosomes have successfully made spindle-microtubule attachments. Defects in the mitotic checkpoint generate aneuploidy and might facilitate tumorigenesis, but more severe disabling of checkpoint signalling is a possible anticancer strategy.
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