Chromothripsis and tumor development. DNA damage may lead to the
formation of micronuclei, extranuclear structures containing a single
chromosome, surrounded by a nuclear membrane. During the interphase, the
micronuclei membrane disrupts leading to chromosome shattering because the DNA
is fragmented by exposure to cytoplasmic nucleases. The resulting chromosome
fragments –or some of them- can be re-localized in the nuclei during
subsequent mitoses and re-ligated at random by the non-homologous-end-joint
(NHEJ) repair system. This process, known as chromothripsis, generates aberrant
chromosomes with complex, random, rearrangements, leading to a very high number
of genetic alterations within a few cell cycles, and to the possible emergence
of malignant cell clones.