| Literature DB >> 19389934 |
Hong Yu1, Ronan McDaid, John Lee, Patricia Possik, Ling Li, Suresh M Kumar, David E Elder, Patricia Van Belle, Phyllis Gimotty, Matt Guerra, Rachel Hammond, Katharine L Nathanson, Maria Dalla Palma, Meenhard Herlyn, Xiaowei Xu.
Abstract
Melanocytic nevi frequently harbor oncogenic BRAF mutations, but only a minority progress to melanoma. In human melanocytes, persistent BRAF(V600E) expression triggers oncogene-induced senescence, which implies that bypass of oncogene-induced senescence is necessary for malignant transformation of melanocytes. We show that a subpopulation of primary human melanocytes with persistent expression of BRAF(V600E) do not enter oncogene-induced senescence, but instead survive despite heightened MAPK activity. Disruption of the p53 pathway using short-hairpin RNA initiated rapid growth of these V600E(+) melanocytes in vitro. The resultant V600E(+)/p53(sh) melanocytes grew anchorage-independently in soft agar, formed pigmented lesions reminiscent of in situ melanoma in artificial skin reconstructs, and were weakly tumorigenic in vivo. Array comparative genomic hybridization analysis demonstrated that the transformed melanocytes acquired a substantial deletion in chromosome 13, which encodes the Rb1 tumor suppressor gene. Gene expression profiling study of nevi and melanomas showed that p53 target genes were differentially expressed in melanomas compared with nevi, suggesting a dysfunctional p53 pathway in melanoma in vivo. In summary, these data demonstrate that a subpopulation of melanocytes possesses the ability to survive BRAF(V600E)-induced senescence, and suggest that p53 inactivation may promote malignant transformation of these cells.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19389934 PMCID: PMC2684200 DOI: 10.2353/ajpath.2009.081057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Pathol ISSN: 0002-9440 Impact factor: 4.307