6533b861fe1ef96bd12c58f7
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Time-point and dosage of gene inactivation determine the tumor spectrum in conditional Ptch knockouts
Heidi HahnVictor W. ArmstrongLeticia Quintanilla-martinezAnke FrommholdTanja HellerWalter J. Schulz-schaefferJulia ReifenbergerLeszek WojnowskiMark WijgerdeArne ZibatFrauke NitzkiAnja Uhmannsubject
PatchedPatched ReceptorsCancer ResearchPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyAgingSkin NeoplasmsGene DosageReceptors Cell SurfaceBiologymedicine.disease_causeGene dosageGastrointestinal epitheliumLoss of heterozygosity03 medical and health sciencesMice0302 clinical medicineRhabdomyosarcomamedicineAnimalsGene SilencingRhabdomyosarcomaMuscle SkeletalGerm-Line MutationPeritoneal Neoplasms030304 developmental biologyGastrointestinal NeoplasmsMedulloblastomaMice Knockout0303 health sciencesMutationMuscle NeoplasmsCystsGeneral MedicinePTCH1 Genemedicine.disease3. Good healthPatched-1 Receptorstomatognathic diseasesCarcinoma Basal Cell030220 oncology & carcinogenesisMutationCancer researchPrecancerous Conditionsdescription
Mutations in Patched (PTCH) have been associated with tumors characteristic both for children [medulloblastoma (MB) and rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS)] and for elderly [basal cell carcinoma (BCC)]. The determinants of the variability in tumor onset and histology are unknown. We investigated the effects of the time-point and dosage of Ptch inactivation on tumor spectrum using conditional Ptch-knockout mice. Ptch heterozygosity induced prenatally resulted in the formation of RMS, which was accompanied by the silencing of the remaining wild-type Ptch allele. In contrast, RMS was observed neither after mono- nor biallelic postnatal deletion of Ptch. Postnatal biallelic deletion of Ptch led to BCC precancerous lesions of the gastrointestinal epithelium and mesenteric tumors. Hamartomatous gastrointestinal cystic tumors were induced by monoallelic, but not biallelic Ptch mutations, independently of the time-point of mutation induction. These data suggest that the expressivity of Ptch deficiency is largely determined by the time-point, the gene dose and mode of Ptch inactivation. Furthermore, they point to key differences in the tumorigenic mechanisms underlying adult and childhood tumors. The latter ones are unique among all tumors since their occurrence decreases rather than increases with age. A better understanding of mechanisms underlying this ontological restriction is of potential therapeutic value.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2009-01-01 | Carcinogenesis |