| Literature DB >> 15170817 |
Laura A Christensen1, Claudio J Conti, Susan M Fischer, Karen M Vasquez.
Abstract
A link between genetic abnormalities and carcinogenesis is well established. It follows that a correlation exists between mutation frequency and malignant progression. We have determined the spontaneous and DNA damage-induced mutation frequencies for a series of cell lines derived from SENCAR mouse keratinocytes at various stages of malignant progression. Nontumorigenic mouse keratinocytes (3PC), papillomas (MT1/2), squamous-cell carcinomas (CH72), and spindle-cell carcinomas (CH72T4) were transfected with damaged or undamaged shuttle vectors containing a supF mutation reporter gene. The plasmid mutation frequencies were determined by blue/white screening. The spontaneous plasmid mutation frequency of the squamous-cell carcinoma line was slightly higher than the mutation frequencies of the other cell lines tested. The DNA damage induced by triplex-directed psoralen crosslinks increased the mutation frequencies sixfold to eighteenfold in all cell lines tested, with no significant differences among the cell lines. Sequence analyses revealed that the spindle-cell carcinoma line had a different spontaneous mutation spectrum from the other cell lines. DNA damage-induced mutations were predominantly point mutations at the triplex-duplex junction in all of the cell lines tested, as expected. These data suggested that a strong mutator phenotype was not required for progression to an advanced malignant phenotype in our model system. Copyright 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15170817 DOI: 10.1002/mc.20026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Carcinog ISSN: 0899-1987 Impact factor: 4.784