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Publication : Enhanced skin carcinogenesis in cyclin D1-conditional transgenic mice: cyclin D1 alters keratinocyte response to calcium-induced terminal differentiation.

First Author  Yamamoto H Year  2002
Journal  Cancer Res Volume  62
Issue  6 Pages  1641-7
PubMed ID  11912134 Mgi Jnum  J:75626
Mgi Id  MGI:2177144 Citation  Yamamoto H, et al. (2002) Enhanced skin carcinogenesis in cyclin D1-conditional transgenic mice: cyclin D1 alters keratinocyte response to calcium-induced terminal differentiation. Cancer Res 62(6):1641-7
abstractText  Cyclin D1 is a critical gene involved in the regulation of progression through the G(1) phase of the cell cycle, thereby contributing to cell proliferation. Gene amplification and abnormal expression of Cyclin D1 have been described in several human cancers. To understand their biological significance in skin carcinogenesis, we established Cyclin D1-conditional transgenic mice with C57BL/6J background, in which skin-specific overexpression of Cyclin D1 transgene was observed. The mice were subjected to dimethylbenz[a]anthracene complete skin carcinogenesis studies. After 40 weeks of repeated administration of dimethylbenz[a]anthracene on the skin (once a week), all of the mice with high Cyclin D1 expression had papillomas, whereas only 9.5% of the control mice without the transgene developed papillomas. Primary cultured keratinocytes with induced Cyclin D1 transgene expression showed resistance to calcium-induced terminal differentiation and continued to replicate in vitro. These results clearly provide us with direct experimental evidence that overexpression of CyclinD1 induces excessive dermal cell proliferation via the altered differentiation state of keratinocytes. The conditional transgenic mice described here provide excellent in vivo and in vitro model systems to understand the role of cyclin D1 and deregulation of the cell cycle in carcinogenesis.
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