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1.
Several studies have shown that forced expression of oncogenic H-ras can induce a senescence-like permanent growth arrest in normal cells. Here we report that expression of oncogenic H-ras in human osteosarcoma U2OS cells also resulted in a senescence-like flat and enlarged cell morphology and permanent growth arrest. In contrast to normal human fibroblasts, U2OS cells were arrested independently of the p16 and ARF tumor suppressors. Treatment with a MEK inhibitor or a p38MAPK inhibitor interrupted oncogenic H-ras-induced growth arrest in U2OS cells, suggesting that activation of MAPK pathways is important. To further determine whether this process is unique to oncogenic H-ras signaling, we examined the effect of oncogenic K-ras on normal cells and human osteosarcoma cells. Similar to oncogenic H-ras, oncogenic K-ras also induced senescence in normal fibroblasts, while transforming immortalized mouse fibroblasts. However, in contrast to oncogenic H-ras, oncogenic K-ras failed to induce a permanent growth arrest in osteosarcoma U2OS cells. Additionally, cells transduced with oncogenic K-ras exhibited distinguishable cellular changes compared to those transduced with oncogenic H-ras. In summary, we report for the first time that oncogenic H-ras signaling can trigger a senescence-like growth arrest in tumor cells, independent of the p16 and ARF tumor suppressors. This result suggests that tumor cells may harbor a senescence-like program that can be activated by ras signaling. Moreover, our study uncovered a cell type-dependent differential response to oncogenic K-ras, as compared to oncogenic H-ras.  相似文献   

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Activating mutations of the oncogene K-ras are found in one third of all human cancers. Much of our knowledge on K-ras signal transduction and its influence on tumor initiation and progression comes from in vitro studies with cell lines. However, mouse models of human cancer allow a much more faithful recapitulation of the human disease, and the in vivo perspective is crucial for our understanding of neoplasia. In recent years, several new murine models for K-ras-induced tumorigenesis have been described. They allow new insights into the specific role that oncogenic K-ras proteins play in different solid tumors, and they permit the molecular dissection of the pathways that are initiated by somatic mutations in subsets of cells. Key advances have been made by the use of tissue-specific and inducible control of expression, which is achieved by the Cre/LoxP technology or the tetracycline system. from these sophisticated models, a common picture emerges: The effects of K-ras on tumor initiation depend strongly on the cellular context, and different tissues vary in their susceptibility to K-ras transformation.  相似文献   

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Wang Z  Feng Y  Bardessy N  Wong KK  Liu XY  Ji H 《PloS one》2012,7(5):e37308
Animal models which allow the temporal regulation of gene activities are valuable for dissecting gene function in tumorigenesis. Here we have constructed a conditional inducible estrogen receptor-K-ras(G12D) (ER-K-ras(G12D)) knock-in mice allele that allows us to temporally switch on or off the activity of K-ras oncogenic mutant through tamoxifen administration. In vitro studies using mice embryonic fibroblast (MEF) showed that a dose of tamoxifen at 0.05 μM works optimally for activation of ER-K-ras(G12D) independent of the gender status. Furthermore, tamoxifen-inducible activation of K-ras(G12D) promotes cell proliferation, anchor-independent growth, transformation as well as invasion, potentially via activation of downstream MAPK pathway and cell cycle progression. Continuous activation of K-ras(G12D) in vivo by tamoxifen treatment is sufficient to drive the neoplastic transformation of normal lung epithelial cells in mice. Tamoxifen withdrawal after the tumor formation results in apoptosis and tumor regression in mouse lungs. Taken together, these data have convincingly demonstrated that K-ras mutant is essential for neoplastic transformation and this animal model may provide an ideal platform for further detailed characterization of the role of K-ras oncogenic mutant during different stages of lung tumorigenesis.  相似文献   

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Activation of K-ras and inactivation of p16 are the most frequently identified genetic alterations in human pancreatic epithelial adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Mouse models engineered with mutant K-ras and deleted p16 recapitulate key pathological features of PDAC. However, a human cell culture transformation model that recapitulates the human pancreatic molecular carcinogenesis is lacking. In this study, we investigated the role of p16 in hTERT-immortalized human pancreatic epithelial nestin-expressing (HPNE) cells expressing mutant K-ras (K-rasG12V). We found that expression of p16 was induced by oncogenic K-ras in these HPNE cells and that silencing of this induced p16 expression resulted in tumorigenic transformation and development of metastatic PDAC in an orthotopic xenograft mouse model. Our results revealed that PI3K/Akt, ERK1/2 pathways and TGFα signaling were activated by K-ras and involved in the malignant transformation of human pancreatic cells. Also, p38/MAPK pathway was involved in p16 up-regulation. Thus, our findings establish an experimental cell-based model for dissecting signaling pathways in the development of human PDAC. This model provides an important tool for studying the molecular basis of PDAC development and gaining insight into signaling mechanisms and potential new therapeutic targets for altered oncogenic signaling pathways in PDAC.  相似文献   

5.
L Shen  SH Kim  CY Chen 《PloS one》2012,7(7):e40435
Pancreatic cancer is a devastating human malignancy and gain of functional mutations in K-ras oncogene is observed in 75%-90% of the patients. Studies have shown that oncogenic ras is not only able to promote cell growth or survival, but also apoptosis, depending upon circumstances. Using pancreatic cancer cell lines with or without expressing mutated K-ras, we demonstrated that the inhibition of endogenous PKC activity sensitized human pancreatic cancer cells (MIA and PANC-1) expressing mutated K-ras to apoptosis, which had no apoptotic effect on BxPC-3 pancreatic cancer cells that contain a normal Ras as well as human lung epithelial BAES-2B cells. In this apoptotic process, the level of ROS was increased and PUMA was upregulated in a p73-dependent fashion in MIA and PANC-1 cells. Subsequently, caspase-3 was cleaved. A full induction of apoptosis required the activation of both ROS- and p73-mediated pathways. The data suggest that PKC is a crucial factor that copes with aberrant K-ras to maintain the homeostasis of the pancreatic cancer cells harboring mutated K-ras. However, the suppression or loss of PKC disrupts the balance and initiates an apoptotic crisis, in which ROS and p73 appear the potential, key targets.  相似文献   

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Type C RNA viruses have been considered oncogenic because they are found associated with animal tumors and can induce cancers in several animal species. Those viruses that rapidly cause cancer appear to contain an oncogenic gene which resembles genetic sequences present in normal cells. This gene codes for a transforming protein which may be a normal cellular enzyme or a slightly altered cellular product. Its mechanism for transforming a cell is not yet known. Other oncogenic viruses, such as the chronic leukemia viruses, may not produce an oncogenic protein but may affect, by other means, specific target cells so they become malignant. Recent evidence now suggests that the majority of endogenous type C viruses are not transforming agents but inherited in the host to function in other biologic processes. These viruses do not contain transduced cellular genes which are responsible for cancer. Their role probably depends on their expression of other gene products which aid in normal development. These observations suggest that the ultimate control of human cancer may result from the identification of the oncogenic cellular-like genes transduced by some type C viruses even if a true human oncogenic virus is not isolated.  相似文献   

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Cloning oncogenic ras-regulated genes by differential display   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The coordinated regulation of gene expression is a key cellular function that specifies cell characteristics as well as controls normal physiological processes of the organism. Deregulation of this gene expression leads to a variety of abnormal conditions such as cancer. The ras oncogene is one of the most frequently found mutations in various types of human cancer. The mutated Ras protein constitutively elicits multiple mitogenic signals to the nucleus to alter gene expression of target genes that are involved in a broad range of normal cellular functions. Thus the identification of these genes may provide an important tool toward the understanding of these pathogenic processes. As a first step to reveal these processes at the molecular level and to dissect the key pathway employed by oncogenic Ras protein, we have looked for its target genes in rodent model cell lines using the differential display method. Our initial screening has isolated a number of genes either up- or downregulated by oncogenic ras activation. Although the functional analyses of these genes in terms of ras-mediated cell transformation will be the major challenge, differential display has come to be a very efficient tool that helped us move to the next step. In this short report, we focus primarily on the technical aspects of differential display and experimental designs used in this study.  相似文献   

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Activating mutations within the K-ras gene occur in a high percentage of human pancreatic carcinomas. We reported previously that the presence of oncogenic, activated K-ras in human pancreatic carcinoma cell lines did not result in constitutive activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK1 and ERK2). In the present study, we further characterized the ERK signaling pathway in pancreatic tumor cell lines in order to determine whether the ERK pathway is subject to a compensatory downregulation. We found that the attenuation of serum-induced ERK activation was not due to a delay in the kinetics of ERK phosphorylation. Treatment with the tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor orthovanadate increased the level of ERK phosphorylation, implicating a vanadate-sensitive tyrosine phosphatase in the negative regulation of ERK. Furthermore, expression of a dual specificity phosphatase capable of inactivating ERK known as mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase phosphatase-2 (MKP-2) was elevated in most of the pancreatic tumor cell lines and correlated with the presence of active MAP kinase kinase (MEK). Taken together, these results suggest that pancreatic tumor cells expressing oncogenic K-ras compensate, in part, by upregulating the expression of MKP-2 to repress the ERK signaling pathway.  相似文献   

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Matrix metalloproteinase 10 (MMP-10; stromelysin 2) is a member of a large family of structurally related matrix metalloproteinases, many of which have been implicated in tumor progression, invasion and metastasis. We recently identified Mmp10 as a gene that is highly induced in tumor-initiating lung bronchioalveolar stem cells (BASCs) upon activation of oncogenic Kras in a mouse model of lung adenocarcinoma. However, the potential role of Mmp10 in lung tumorigenesis has not been addressed. Here, we demonstrate that Mmp10 is overexpressed in lung tumors induced by either the smoke carcinogen urethane or oncogenic Kras. In addition, we report a significant reduction in lung tumor number and size after urethane exposure or genetic activation of oncogenic Kras in Mmp10 null (Mmp10(-/-)) mice. This inhibitory effect is reflected in a defect in the ability of Mmp10-deficient BASCs to expand and undergo transformation in response to urethane or oncogenic Kras in vivo and in vitro, demonstrating a role for Mmp10 in the tumor-initiating activity of Kras-transformed lung stem cells. To determine the potential relevance of MMP10 in human cancer we analyzed Mmp10 expression in publicly-available gene expression profiles of human cancers. Our analysis reveals that MMP10 is highly overexpressed in human lung tumors. Gene set enhancement analysis (GSEA) demonstrates that elevated MMP10 expression correlates with both cancer stem cell and tumor metastasis genomic signatures in human lung cancer. Finally, Mmp10 is elevated in many human tumor types suggesting a widespread role for Mmp10 in human malignancy. We conclude that Mmp10 plays an important role in lung tumor initiation via maintenance of a highly tumorigenic, cancer-initiating, stem-like cell population, and that Mmp10 expression is associated with stem-like, highly metastatic genotypes in human lung cancers. These results indicate that Mmp10 may represent a novel therapeutic approach to target lung cancer stem cells.  相似文献   

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Dysfunction of the Hippo pathway enables cells to evade contact inhibition and provides advantages for cancerous overgrowth.However,for a significant portion of human cancer,how Hippo signaling is perturbed remains unknown.To answer this question,we performed a genome-wide screening for genes that affect the Hippo pathway in Drosophila and cross-referenced the hit genes with human cancer genome.In our screen,Prosap was identified as a novel regulator of the Hippo pathway that potently affects tissue growth.Interestingly,a mammalian homolog of Prosap,SHANK2,is the most frequently amplified gene on 11 q13,a major tumor amplicon in human cancer.Gene amplification profile in this 11q13 amplicon clearly indicates selective pressure for SHANK2 amplification.More importantly,across the human cancer genome,SHANK2 is the most frequently amplified gene that is not located within the Myc amplicon.Further studies in multiple human cell lines confirmed that SHANK2 overexpression causes deregulation of Hippo signaling through competitive binding for a LATS1 activator,and as a potential oncogene,SHANK2 promotes cellular transformation and tumor formation in vivo.In cancer cell lines with deregulated Hippo pathway,depletion of SHANK2 restores Hippo signaling and ceases cellular proliferation.Taken together,these results suggest that SHANK2 is an evolutionarily conserved Hippo pathway regulator,commonly amplified in human cancer and potently promotes cancer.Our study for the first time illustrated oncogenic function of SHANK2,one of the most frequently amplified gene in human cancer.Furthermore,given that in normal adult tissues,SHANK2 s expression is largely restricted to the nervous system,SHANK2 may represent an interesting target for anticancer therapy.  相似文献   

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K-ras is one of the most frequently mutated genes in virtually all types of human cancers. Using mouse fetal liver erythroid progenitors as a model system, we studied the role of endogenous K-ras signaling in erythroid differentiation. When oncogenic K-ras is expressed from its endogenous promoter, it hyperactivates cytokine-dependent signaling pathways and results in a partial block in erythroid differentiation. In erythroid progenitors deficient in K-ras, cytokine-dependent Akt activation is greatly reduced, leading to delays in erythroid differentiation. Thus, both loss- and gain-of-Kras functions affect erythroid differentiation through modulation of cytokine signaling. These results support the notion that in human cancer patients oncogenic Ras signaling might be controlled by antagonizing essential cytokines.  相似文献   

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