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Impaired Planar Germ Cell Division in the Testis, Caused by Dissociation of RHAMM from the Spindle, Results in Hypofertility and Seminoma
ISSN
1538-7445
0008-5472
Date Issued
2016
Author(s)
Li, Huaibiao
Frappart, Lucien
Moll, Jürgen
Kroll, Torsten
Hamann, Jana
Kufferath, Iris
Groth, Marco
Taudien, Stefan
Schütte, Moritz
Yaspo, Marie-Laure
Heuer, Heike
Lange, Bodo M.H.
Platzer, Matthias
Zatloukal, Kurt
Herrlich, Peter
Ploubidou, Aspasia
DOI
10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-16-0179
Abstract
Hypofertility is a risk factor for the development of testicular germ cell tumors (TGCT), but the initiating event linking these pathologies is unknown. We hypothesized that excessive planar division of undifferentiated germ cells promotes their self-renewal and TGCT development. However, our results obtained from mouse models and seminoma patients demonstrated the opposite. Defective planar divisions of undifferentiated germ cells caused their premature exit from the seminiferous tubule niche, resulting in germ cell depletion, hypofertility, intratubular germ cell neoplasias, and seminoma development. Oriented divisions of germ cells, which determine their fate, were regulated by spindle-associated RHAMM-a function we found to be abolished in 96% of human seminomas. Mechanistically, RHAMM expression is regulated by the testis-specific polyadenylation protein CFIm25, which is downregulated in the human seminomas. These results suggested that spindle misorientation is oncogenic, not by promoting selfrenewing germ cell divisions within the niche, but by prematurely displacing proliferating cells from their normal epithelial milieu. Furthermore, they suggested RHAMM loss-of-function and spindle misorientation as an initiating event underlying both hypofertility and TGCT initiation. These findings identify spindle-associated RHAMM as an intrinsic regulator of male germ cell fate and as a gatekeeper preventing initiation of TGCTs.