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Publication : The Müllerian inhibiting substance type 2 receptor suppresses tumorigenesis in testes with sustained β-catenin signaling.

First Author  Tanwar PS Year  2012
Journal  Carcinogenesis Volume  33
Issue  12 Pages  2351-61
PubMed ID  22962306 Mgi Jnum  J:193300
Mgi Id  MGI:5468090 Doi  10.1093/carcin/bgs281
Citation  Tanwar PS, et al. (2012) The Mullerian inhibiting substance type 2 receptor suppresses tumorigenesis in testes with sustained beta-catenin signaling. Carcinogenesis 33(12):2351-61
abstractText  Dysregulated WNT/beta-catenin signaling in murine testes results in a phenotype with complete germ cell loss that resembles human Sertoli cell-only syndrome. In other systems, including the ovary, dysregulated WNT/beta-catenin induces tumorigenesis but no tumors are observed in the mutant testes without deletion of a tumor suppressor, such as phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN). Mullerian inhibiting substance (MIS, also known as AMH), a member of the transforming growth factor-beta family of growth factors responsible for Mullerian duct regression in fetal males, has been shown to inhibit tumor growth in vitro and in vivo but its role as an endogenous tumor suppressor has never been reported. We have deleted the MIS type 2 receptor (MISR2), and thus MIS signaling, in mice with dysregulated WNT/beta-catenin and show that these mice develop testicular stromal tumors with 100% penetrance within a few months postnatal. The tumors are highly proliferative and have characteristics of either Sertoli cell tumors or progenitor Leydig cell tumors based on their marker profiles and histology. Phosphorylated Sma and mothers against decapentaplegic-related homolog 1/5/8 is absent in the tumors and beta-catenin target genes are induced. The tumor suppressor TP53 is also highly expressed in the tumors, as is phosphorylated gammaH2AX, which is indicative of DNA damage. The phenotype of these tumors closely resembles those observed when PTEN is also deleted in mice with dysregulated WNT/beta-catenin. Tumorigenesis in these mice provides conclusive evidence that physiological MIS signaling is a tumor suppressor mechanism and suggests that targeted treatment of MISR2-expressing cancers with therapeutic MIS should have a beneficial effect on tumor progression.
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