Abstract

Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) or epidermoid cancer is a frequent and aggressive malignancy. However in apparent paradox it retains the squamous differentiation phenotype except for very dysplastic lesions. We have shown that cell cycle stress in normal epidermal keratinocytes triggers a squamous differentiation response involving irreversible mitosis block and polyploidisation. Here we show that cutaneous SCC cells conserve a partial squamous DNA damage-induced differentiation response that allows them to overcome the cell division block. The capacity to divide in spite of drug-induced mitotic stress and DNA damage made well-differentiated SCC cells more genomically instable and more malignant in vivo. Consistently, in a series of human biopsies, non-metastatic SCCs displayed a higher degree of chromosomal alterations and higher expression of the S phase regulator Cyclin E and the DNA damage signal γH2AX than the less aggressive, non-squamous, basal cell carcinomas. However, metastatic SCCs lost the γH2AX signal and Cyclin E, or accumulated cytoplasmic Cyclin E. Conversely, inhibition of endogenous Cyclin E in well-differentiated SCC cells interfered with the squamous phenotype. The results suggest a dual role of cell cycle stress-induced differentiation in squamous cancer: the resulting mitotic blocks would impose, when irreversible, a proliferative barrier, when reversible, a source of genomic instability, thus contributing to malignancy.

Highlights

  • Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) or epidermoid carcinoma arises in stratified epithelia including skin, head and neck, oesophagus, or cervix and in simple epithelia (25–30% of lung cancer; http://www.cancer.org http://www.cancer.gov)

  • We find that SCC but not basal cell carcinoma (BCC) cells retain a partial squamous differentiation response to replication stress induced by Cyclin E

  • Cyclin E accumulates during squamous differentiation and when overexpressed in proliferative keratinocytes it promotes replication stress, DNA damage, mitotic defects and polyploidy.[9,20,22,23]

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Summary

Introduction

Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) or epidermoid carcinoma arises in stratified epithelia including skin, head and neck, oesophagus, or cervix and in simple epithelia (25–30% of lung cancer; http://www.cancer.org http://www.cancer.gov). Replication stress by causing DNA damage alerts cell cycle checkpoints of G2 and mitosis.[18,19] In keratinocytes, a mere impairment of the G2/M transitions induces massive terminal squamous differentiation and polyploidy and loss of proliferative potential within 48 h.9,14,20. This includes the inhibition of mitotic kinases (Aurora Kinase B, Polo-like Kinase, cdk1) or microtubuli (Nocodazole, Taxol) and S phase defects (Doxorubicin or Bleomycine).

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