Novel screen for anti-cancer drugs that elevate chromosome instability (CIN) using human artificial chromosome (HAC)

Oncotarget. 2018 Dec 7;9(96):36833-36835. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.26406.

Abstract

Human artificial chromosomes (HACs) bearing functional kinetochores have been exploited as promising systems for gene delivery and expression and in studies of different epigenetic modifications on kinetochore structure and function. The HAC-based technology has been also used to develop drug screening and assessment strategies to manipulate the CIN (chromosome instability) phenotype in cancer cells. More recently, we designed a new protocol for systematic analysis of compounds specifically targeting telomeres and telomerase. This approach used two isogenic cell lines containing a circular HAC (lacking telomeres) and a linear HAC (containing telomeres): compounds that target telomerase or telomeres should preferentially induce loss of the linear HAC but not the circular HAC. This platform enables identification and ranking of compounds that greatly increase chromosome mis-segregation rates as a result of telomere dysfunction and may expedite the development of new therapeutic strategies for cancer treatment.

Keywords: CIN; HAC; anti-cancer drugs; chromosome instability; human artificial chromosome.