Literature DB >> 10359802

Different mutator phenotypes in Mlh1- versus Pms2-deficient mice.

X Yao1, A B Buermeyer, L Narayanan, D Tran, S M Baker, T A Prolla, P M Glazer, R M Liskay, N Arnheim.   

Abstract

Deficiencies in DNA mismatch repair (MMR) result in increased mutation rates and cancer risk in both humans and mice. Mouse strains homozygous for knockouts of either the Pms2 or Mlh1 MMR gene develop cancer but exhibit very different tumor spectra; only Mlh1(-/-) animals develop intestinal tumors. We carried out a detailed study of the microsatellite mutation spectra in each knockout strain. Five mononucleotide repeat tracts at four different chromosomal locations were studied by using single-molecule PCR or an in vivo forward mutation assay. Three dinucleotide repeat loci also were examined. Surprisingly, the mononucleotide repeat mutation frequency in Mlh1(-/-) mice was 2- to 3-fold higher than in Pms2(-/-) animals. The higher mutation frequency in Mlh1(-/-) mice may be a consequence of some residual DNA repair capacity in the Pms2(-/-) animals. Relevant to this idea, we observed that Pms2(-/-) mice exhibit almost normal levels of Mlh1p, whereas Mlh1(-/-) animals lack both Mlh1p and Pms2p. Comparison between Mlh1(-/-) animals and Mlh1(-/-) and Pms2(-/-) double knockout mice revealed little difference in mutator phenotype, suggesting that Mlh1 nullizygosity is sufficient to inactivate MMR completely. The findings may provide a basis for understanding the greater predisposition to intestinal cancer of Mlh1(-/-) mice. Small differences (2- to 3-fold) in mononucleotide repeat mutation rates may have dramatic effects on tumor development, requiring multiple genetic alterations in coding regions. Alternatively, this strain difference in tumor spectra also may be related to the consequences of the absence of Pms2p compared with the absence of both Pms2p and Mlh1p on as yet little understood cellular processes.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10359802      PMCID: PMC22005          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.12.6850

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  44 in total

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7.  Tumour susceptibility and spontaneous mutation in mice deficient in Mlh1, Pms1 and Pms2 DNA mismatch repair.

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9.  The Saccharomyces cerevisiae MLH3 gene functions in MSH3-dependent suppression of frameshift mutations.

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Review 10.  Genetic instabilities in human cancers.

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  32 in total

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6.  Maternal effect for DNA mismatch repair in the mouse.

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7.  PMS2 endonuclease activity has distinct biological functions and is essential for genome maintenance.

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8.  An intact Pms2 ATPase domain is not essential for male fertility.

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9.  The E705K mutation in hPMS2 exerts recessive, not dominant, effects on mismatch repair.

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10.  Apoptotic function of human PMS2 compromised by the nonsynonymous single-nucleotide polymorphic variant R20Q.

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