Etoposide induces MLL rearrangements and other chromosomal abnormalities in human embryonic stem cells
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2009Resumen
MLL rearrangements are hallmark genetic abnormalities in infant
leukemia known to arise in utero. They can be induced during
human prenatal development upon exposure to etoposide. We also
hypothesize that chronic exposure to etoposide might render cells
more susceptible to other genomic insults. Here, for the first time,
human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) were used as a model to test
the effects of etoposide on human early embryonic development.We
addressed whether: (i) low doses of etoposide promote MLL rearrangements
in hESCs and hESCs-derived hematopoietic cells; (ii)
MLL rearrangements are sufficient to confer hESCs with a selective
growth advantage and (iii) continuous exposure to low doses of
etoposide induces hESCs to acquire other chromosomal abnormalities.
In contrast to cord blood-derived CD341 and hESC-derived
hematopoietic cells, exposure of undifferentiated hESCs to a single
low dose of etoposide induced a pronounced cell death. Etoposide
induced MLL rearrangements in hESCs and their hematopoietic
derivatives. After long-term culture, the proportion of hESCs
harboring MLL rearrangements diminished and neither cell cycle
variations nor genomic abnormalities were observed in the
etoposide-treated hESCs, suggesting that MLL rearrangements
are insufficient to confer hESCs with a selective proliferation/
survival advantage. However, continuous exposure to etoposide
induced MLL breaks and primed hESCs to acquire other major
karyotypic abnormalities. These data show that chronic exposure
of developmentally early stem cells to etoposide induces
MLL rearrangements and make hESCs more prone to acquire
other chromosomal abnormalities than postnatal CD341 cells,
linking embryonic genotoxic exposure to genomic instability.