First Author | Marney CB | Year | 2022 |
Journal | Cells | Volume | 11 |
Issue | 11 | PubMed ID | 35681513 |
Mgi Jnum | J:325568 | Mgi Id | MGI:7286620 |
Doi | 10.3390/cells11111818 | Citation | Marney CB, et al. (2022) A Unique Spectrum of Spontaneous Tumors in Dino Knockout Mice Identifies Tissue-Specific Requirements for Tumor Suppression. Cells 11(11) |
abstractText | Here, we report that Dino, a lncRNA required for p53 signaling, suppresses spontaneous tumorigenesis in mice. Dino(-/-) mice develop significantly more malignant tumors than Dino(+/+) littermate controls, consisting predominantly of sarcomas, B cell lymphomas and additional rare tumors. While the prevalence of lymphomas and sarcomas in Dino(-/-) mice is similar to that of mice with p53 loss, important distinctions emerged. p53-null mice predominantly develop T cell lymphomas; however, no spontaneous T cell lymphoma was observed in Dino(-/-) mice. Rather than being a phenocopy of the p53-null tumor spectrum, spontaneous tumors in Dino(-/-) mice resemble the spectrum of human cancers in which DINO is recurrently silenced by methylation in a manner that is mutually exclusive with TP53 alterations, suggesting that similar tissues in human and mouse require DINO for tumor suppression. Consistent with a tissue-specific role for Dino in tumor suppression, loss of Dino had no impact on the development of radiation-induced T cell lymphoma and oncogene-driven medulloblastoma, tumors that are accelerated by the loss of p53. Taken together, these data indicate that Dino serves as a potent tumor suppressor molecule specific to a select subset of tissues in mice and humans. |