Literature DB >> 18445683

Fos cooperation with PTEN loss elicits keratoacanthoma not carcinoma, owing to p53/p21 WAF-induced differentiation triggered by GSK3beta inactivation and reduced AKT activity.

Denggao Yao1, Claire L Alexander, Jean A Quinn, Weng-Chyn Chan, Hong Wu, David A Greenhalgh.   

Abstract

To investigate gene synergism in multistage skin carcinogenesis, the RU486-inducible cre/lox system was employed to ablate Pten function (K14.cre/Delta5Pten flx) in mouse epidermis expressing activated Fos (HK1.Fos). RU486-treated HK1.Fos/Delta5Pten flx mice exhibited hyperplasia, hyperkeratosis and tumours that progressed to highly differentiated keratoacanthomas, rather than to carcinomas, owing to re-expression of high p53 and p21 WAF levels. Despite elevated MAP kinase activity, cyclin D1 and cyclin E2 overexpression, and increased AKT activity that produced areas of highly proliferative papillomatous keratinocytes, increasing levels of GSK3beta inactivation induced a novel p53/p21 WAF expression profile, which subsequently halted proliferation and accelerated differentiation to give the hallmark keratosis of keratoacanthomas. A pivotal facet to this GSK3beta-triggered mechanism centred on increasing p53 expression in basal layer keratinocytes. This increase in expression reduced activated AKT expression and released inhibition of p21 WAF, which accelerated keratinocyte differentiation, as indicated by unique basal layer expression of differentiation-specific keratin K1 alongside premature filaggrin and loricrin expression. Thus, Fos synergism with Pten loss elicited a benign tumour context where GSK3beta-induced p53/p21 WAF expression continually switched AKT-associated proliferation into differentiation, preventing further progression. This putative compensatory mechanism required the critical availability of normal p53 and/or p21 WAF, otherwise deregulated Fos, Akt and Gsk3beta associate with malignant progression.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18445683     DOI: 10.1242/jcs.021147

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Sci        ISSN: 0021-9533            Impact factor:   5.285


  6 in total

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Journal:  Trends Genet       Date:  2012-11-08       Impact factor: 11.639

2.  Prediction and testing of biological networks underlying intestinal cancer.

Authors:  Vishal N Patel; Gurkan Bebek; John M Mariadason; Donghai Wang; Leonard H Augenlicht; Mark R Chance
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-09-01       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  p53-dependent up-regulation of CDKN1A and down-regulation of CCNE2 in response to beryllium.

Authors:  P Gorjala; J G Cairncross; R K Gary
Journal:  Cell Prolif       Date:  2016-09-09       Impact factor: 6.831

4.  PTEN gene: a model for genetic diseases in dermatology.

Authors:  Corrado Romano; Carmelo Schepis
Journal:  ScientificWorldJournal       Date:  2012-04-30

5.  Discovery of Potent and Selective MRCK Inhibitors with Therapeutic Effect on Skin Cancer.

Authors:  Mathieu Unbekandt; Simone Belshaw; Justin Bower; Maeve Clarke; Jacqueline Cordes; Diane Crighton; Daniel R Croft; Martin J Drysdale; Mathew J Garnett; Kathryn Gill; Christopher Gray; David A Greenhalgh; James A M Hall; Jennifer Konczal; Sergio Lilla; Duncan McArthur; Patricia McConnell; Laura McDonald; Lynn McGarry; Heather McKinnon; Carol McMenemy; Mokdad Mezna; Nicolas A Morrice; June Munro; Gregory Naylor; Nicola Rath; Alexander W Schüttelkopf; Mairi Sime; Michael F Olson
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2018-01-30       Impact factor: 12.701

6.  Keratoacanthoma of the Lip: Activation of the mTOR Pathway, Tumor Suppressor Proteins, and Tumor Senescence.

Authors:  Caroline Siviero Dillenburg; Manoela Domingues Martins; Luise Meurer; Rogerio Moraes Castilho; Cristiane Helena Squarize
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2015-09       Impact factor: 1.817

  6 in total

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