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Publication : Induction of invasive mouse skin carcinomas in transgenic mice with mutations in both H-ras and p53.

First Author  Zhang Z Year  2005
Journal  Mol Cancer Res Volume  3
Issue  10 Pages  563-74
PubMed ID  16254190 Mgi Jnum  J:102874
Mgi Id  MGI:3608185 Doi  10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-05-0144
Citation  Zhang Z, et al. (2005) Induction of invasive mouse skin carcinomas in transgenic mice with mutations in both H-ras and p53. Mol Cancer Res 3(10):563-74
abstractText  Synergistic interaction between H-ras and p53 were systematically examined during skin tumorigenesis. Concurrent expression of an activated H-ras gene and a mutant p53 gene was accomplished by crossing p53(Val135/wt) mice with TG.AC mice. Topical application to wild-type mice with benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) alone produced approximately 26% skin tumor incidence, whereas BaP treatment of p53(wt/wt)Hras(TG.AC/wt), p53(Val135/wt)Hras(wt/wt), and p53(Val135/wt)Hras(TG.AC/wt) mice produced a 75%, 77%, and 100% incidence of skin tumors, respectively. An average of 0.33 tumor per mouse was observed in wild-type (p53(wt/wt)Hras(wt/wt)) mice, whereas approximately 1.54, 1.96, and 3.08 tumors per mouse were seen in BaP-treated p53(wt/wt)Hras(TG.AC/wt), p53(Val135/wt)Hras(wt/wt), and p53(Val135/wt)Hras(TG.AC/wt) mice, respectively. The effects on total tumor volume were even more striking with 7-, 48-, and 588-fold increases in tumor volume compared with wild-type (p53(wt/wt)Hras(wt/wt)) in p53(wt/wt)Hras(TG.AC/wt), p53(Val135/wt)Hras(wt/wt), and p53(Val135/wt)Hras(TG.AC/wt) mice, respectively. Histopathologically, all tumors from p53(wt/wt)Hras(wt/wt) mice were either papillomas or well-differentiated squamous cell carcinomas, whereas the tumors in p53(wt/wt)Hras(TG.AC/wt), p53(Val135/wt)Hras(wt/wt), and p53(Val135/wt)Hras(TG.AC/wt) mice were principally squamous cell carcinomas with varying degree of invasiveness. Particularly, tumors in p53(Val135/wt)Hras(TG.AC/wt) mice exhibited the most rapid growth and the extreme form of tumor invasion. Microarray analysis revealed that dominant-negative p53 (Val135) and activated H-ras affected several cellular processes involved in tumorigenesis possibly through its effects on apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, and Ras-mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways. The present study provides the first in vivo evidence that a germ line p53 mutation and activated H-ras act synergistically to profoundly enhance tumor progression.
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