Literature DB >> 17251441

Persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous due to somatic mosaic deletion of the arf tumor suppressor.

J Derek Thornton1, Doug J Swanson, Michelle N Mary, Deqing Pei, Amy C Martin, Stanley Pounds, Dan Goldowitz, Stephen X Skapek.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Mice lacking the Arf tumor-suppressor gene develop eye disease reminiscent of persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous (PHPV). The current work explores mechanisms by which Arf promotes eye development, and its absence causes a PHPV-like disease.
METHODS: Chimeric mice were made by fusing wild-type and Arf(-/-) morulae. In these experiments, wild-type cells are identified by transgenic expression of GFP from a constitutive promoter. PCR-based genotyping and quantitative analyses after immunofluorescence staining of tissue and cultured cells documented the relative contribution of wild-type and Arf(-/-) cells to different tissues in the eye and different types of cells in the vitreous.
RESULTS: The contributions of the Arf(-/-) lineage to the tail DNA, cornea, retina, and retina pigment epithelium (RPE) correlated with each other in wild-type<-->Arf(-/-) chimeric mice. Newborn chimeras had primary vitreous hyperplasia, evident as a retrolental mass. The mass was usually present when the proportion of Arf(-/-) cells was relatively high and absent when the Arf(-/-) proportion was low. The Pdgfrbeta- and Sma-expressing cells within the mass arose predominantly from the Arf(-/-) population. Ectopic Arf expression induced smooth muscle proteins in cultured pericyte-like cells, and Arf and Sma expression overlapped in hyaloid vessels.
CONCLUSIONS: In the mouse model, loss of Arf in only a subset of cells causes a PHPV-like disease. The data indicate that both cell autonomous and non-cell autonomous effects of Arf may contribute to its role in vitreous development.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17251441     DOI: 10.1167/iovs.06-0765

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci        ISSN: 0146-0404            Impact factor:   4.799


  19 in total

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3.  Formation of persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous in ephrin-A5-/- mice.

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4.  Isolation and characterization of mammalian cells expressing the Arf promoter during eye development.

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7.  Loss of p19(Arf) facilitates the angiogenic switch and tumor initiation in a multi-stage cancer model via p53-dependent and independent mechanisms.

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9.  A nonautonomous role for retinal frizzled-5 in regulating hyaloid vitreous vasculature development.

Authors:  Jianmin Zhang; Sabine Fuhrmann; Monica L Vetter
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10.  A distant, cis-acting enhancer drives induction of Arf by Tgfβ in the developing eye.

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