Mitochondrial Control of Genomic Instability in Cancer

Mitochondria are well known to participate in multiple aspects of tumor formation and progression. They indeed can alter the susceptibility of cells to engage regulated cell death, regulate pro-survival signal transduction pathways and confer metabolic plasticity that adapts to specific tumor cell d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Massimo Bonora, Sonia Missiroli, Mariasole Perrone, Francesco Fiorica, Paolo Pinton, Carlotta Giorgi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Cancers
Subjects:
p53
ROS
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6694/13/8/1914
id doaj-69ca7f2a7b8a40fe882a6928c41ee51b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-69ca7f2a7b8a40fe882a6928c41ee51b2021-04-15T23:05:39ZengMDPI AGCancers2072-66942021-04-01131914191410.3390/cancers13081914Mitochondrial Control of Genomic Instability in CancerMassimo Bonora0Sonia Missiroli1Mariasole Perrone2Francesco Fiorica3Paolo Pinton4Carlotta Giorgi5Department of Medical Sciences, Section of Experimental Medicine and Laboratory for Technologies of Advanced Therapies (LTTA), University of Ferrara, 44121 Ferrara, ItalyDepartment of Medical Sciences, Section of Experimental Medicine and Laboratory for Technologies of Advanced Therapies (LTTA), University of Ferrara, 44121 Ferrara, ItalyDepartment of Medical Sciences, Section of Experimental Medicine and Laboratory for Technologies of Advanced Therapies (LTTA), University of Ferrara, 44121 Ferrara, ItalyDepartment of Radiation Oncology and Nuclear Medicine, AULSS 9 Scaligera, 37100 Verona, ItalyDepartment of Medical Sciences, Section of Experimental Medicine and Laboratory for Technologies of Advanced Therapies (LTTA), University of Ferrara, 44121 Ferrara, ItalyDepartment of Medical Sciences, Section of Experimental Medicine and Laboratory for Technologies of Advanced Therapies (LTTA), University of Ferrara, 44121 Ferrara, ItalyMitochondria are well known to participate in multiple aspects of tumor formation and progression. They indeed can alter the susceptibility of cells to engage regulated cell death, regulate pro-survival signal transduction pathways and confer metabolic plasticity that adapts to specific tumor cell demands. Interestingly, a relatively poorly explored aspect of mitochondria in neoplastic disease is their contribution to the characteristic genomic instability that underlies the evolution of the disease. In this review, we summarize the known mechanisms by which mitochondrial alterations in cancer tolerate and support the accumulation of DNA mutations which leads to genomic instability. We describe recent studies elucidating mitochondrial responses to DNA damage as well as the direct contribution of mitochondria to favor the accumulation of DNA alterations.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6694/13/8/1914mitochondriagenomic instabilitytumor progressionmitophagyp53ROS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Massimo Bonora
Sonia Missiroli
Mariasole Perrone
Francesco Fiorica
Paolo Pinton
Carlotta Giorgi
spellingShingle Massimo Bonora
Sonia Missiroli
Mariasole Perrone
Francesco Fiorica
Paolo Pinton
Carlotta Giorgi
Mitochondrial Control of Genomic Instability in Cancer
Cancers
mitochondria
genomic instability
tumor progression
mitophagy
p53
ROS
author_facet Massimo Bonora
Sonia Missiroli
Mariasole Perrone
Francesco Fiorica
Paolo Pinton
Carlotta Giorgi
author_sort Massimo Bonora
title Mitochondrial Control of Genomic Instability in Cancer
title_short Mitochondrial Control of Genomic Instability in Cancer
title_full Mitochondrial Control of Genomic Instability in Cancer
title_fullStr Mitochondrial Control of Genomic Instability in Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Mitochondrial Control of Genomic Instability in Cancer
title_sort mitochondrial control of genomic instability in cancer
publisher MDPI AG
series Cancers
issn 2072-6694
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Mitochondria are well known to participate in multiple aspects of tumor formation and progression. They indeed can alter the susceptibility of cells to engage regulated cell death, regulate pro-survival signal transduction pathways and confer metabolic plasticity that adapts to specific tumor cell demands. Interestingly, a relatively poorly explored aspect of mitochondria in neoplastic disease is their contribution to the characteristic genomic instability that underlies the evolution of the disease. In this review, we summarize the known mechanisms by which mitochondrial alterations in cancer tolerate and support the accumulation of DNA mutations which leads to genomic instability. We describe recent studies elucidating mitochondrial responses to DNA damage as well as the direct contribution of mitochondria to favor the accumulation of DNA alterations.
topic mitochondria
genomic instability
tumor progression
mitophagy
p53
ROS
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6694/13/8/1914
work_keys_str_mv AT massimobonora mitochondrialcontrolofgenomicinstabilityincancer
AT soniamissiroli mitochondrialcontrolofgenomicinstabilityincancer
AT mariasoleperrone mitochondrialcontrolofgenomicinstabilityincancer
AT francescofiorica mitochondrialcontrolofgenomicinstabilityincancer
AT paolopinton mitochondrialcontrolofgenomicinstabilityincancer
AT carlottagiorgi mitochondrialcontrolofgenomicinstabilityincancer
_version_ 1721525845705621504