Literature DB >> 21892206

Different phenotypic consequences of simultaneous versus stepwise Apc loss.

J M Fischer1, A J Miller, D Shibata, R M Liskay.   

Abstract

APC is considered a gatekeeper for colorectal cancer (CRC). Cells with heterozygous APC mutations have altered expression profiles suggesting that the first APC hit may help set the stage for subsequent transformation. Therefore, we measured transformation efficiency following what we have designated as 'simultaneous' versus 'stepwise' Apc loss. We combined a conditional Apc allele (Apc(CKO)) with a Cre reporter gene and an out-of-frame Cre allele (Pms2(cre)) that stochastically becomes functional by a frameshift mutation in single cells. Loss of one Apc allele (Apc(CKO/+)) had little consequence, whereas simultaneous loss of both Apc alleles (Apc(CKO/CKO)) resulted in increased clonal expansion (crypt fission), consistent with the gatekeeper function of Apc. Interestingly, our analyses showed that most of the Apc-deficient crypts in Apc(CKO/CKO) mice appeared normal, with morphological transformation, including β-catenin deregulation, occurring in only 17% of such crypts. To determine whether transformation efficiency was different following stepwise Apc loss, we combined Apc(CKO) with a germline mutant allele, either Apc(Min) or Apc(1638N). Transformation efficiency following stepwise Apc loss (Apc(Min/CKO) or Apc(1638N/CKO)) was increased five-fold and essentially all of the Apc-deficient cells were dysplastic. In summary, our data suggest that the gatekeeper function of Apc consists of two roles, clonal expansion and morphological transformation, because simultaneous Apc loss frequently leads to occult clonal expansion without morphological transformation, whereas stepwise Apc loss more often results in visible neoplasia. Finally, that Apc-deficient cells in certain scenarios can retain a normal phenotype is unexpected and may have clinical implications for surveillance strategies to prevent CRC.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21892206      PMCID: PMC3235266          DOI: 10.1038/onc.2011.385

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncogene        ISSN: 0950-9232            Impact factor:   9.867


INTRODUCTION

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is thought to occur after the accumulation of mutations in multiple oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. The order of these mutations is uncertain; however, APC is considered to have a gatekeeper role because its mutation is thought to initiate tumorigenesis (Fearon and Vogelstein, 1990). Germline APC mutations are associated with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), and APC mutations are found in the majority of adenomas (Forbes et al., 2010). Mice have been genetically manipulated with germline Apc mutations to mimic both FAP (Oshima et al., 1995; Sasai et al., 2000; Su et al., 1992) and attenuated FAP (Fodde et al., 1994). The gatekeeper function of Apc has been tested in murine models by combining a conditional Apc allele with an inducible Cre gene. Intestine-wide conditional loss of Apc using an epithelial-specific promoter resulted in morphologic hyperplasia within five days (Sansom et al., 2004). Loss of Apc in isolated Lgr5+ stem cells leads to highly efficient transformation, as evidenced by macroadenoma formation, within eight days following Cre induction (Barker et al., 2009), suggesting that loss of Apc is sufficient for transformation. Here, we examine further the gatekeeping role of Apc by combining a conditional Apc allele (Apc) (Kuraguchi et al., 2006) with an out-of-frame Cre allele (Pms2) that stochastically reverts back into frame (Miller et al., 2008). The Pms2 mouse system used in this study is similar to cell type-specific conditional Cre/lox systems that model sporadic tumorigenesis by altering floxed genes in single cells surrounded by “normal” cells (Barker et al., 2009; Hung et al., 2010). However, in our system Cre activation occurs randomly throughout life without exogenous manipulations, therefore better mimicking the normal course of tumorigenesis. Moreover, multiple floxed alleles should be efficiently recombined within a single cell because the Cre allele should be constitutively expressed following frameshift mutation. The modified cell/cell lineage can be traced with a Cre-inducible marker gene, R26R (β-galactosidase or GFP), thus facilitating an assessment of the short- and longer-term consequences of target gene alteration. Because normal crypt stem cells are constantly replaced through neutral drift (Lopez-Garcia et al., 2010; Snippert et al., 2010), the mutated cell must compete with surrounding wild type stem cells to maintain crypt occupancy. By comparing clone sizes, it is possible to infer either negative selection (fewer or smaller β-gal+ foci) or positive selection (more or larger β-gal+ foci) conferred by specific mutation combinations even in the absence of morphologic changes. The earliest phases of tumor progression are difficult to study because small tumors are easily overlooked, or may rapidly progress to larger tumors. Simplistically, loss of both Apc alleles should be sufficient to initiate intestinal tumorigenesis and lead to adenoma formation (Fearon and Vogelstein, 1990). In this study, combinations of different mutant Apc alleles reveal that the gatekeeper role of Apc is surprisingly complex because what we designate as “simultaneous” versus “stepwise” Apc loss yields different neoplastic phenotypes. Specifically, we have found that although simultaneous loss of both Apc alleles in otherwise Apc-normal intestines conferred a selective advantage (larger clone size), only a fraction of mutant cells became transformed. In contrast, we found that stepwise loss of Apc, in which Apc levels are compromised in the every cell of the mouse, resulted more often in overt transformation and adenoma formation.

RESULTS

Stochastic activation of Cre recombinase in the mouse small intestine

To study the consequences of targeted somatic mutation in single isolated cells, we developed a Cre-lox system in which recombination occurs in only a minority of intestinal crypts and is monitored by detection through expression of a Cre-reporter gene (Miller et al., 2008). Whole mount examination of Pms2 mice at an average of 104 days revealed an average of 1845 β-gal+ foci in the proximal small intestine (Figure 1a). When sections were examined, we found that 2–3% of the crypts were β-gal+, with 24% of the β-gal+ foci involving more than one crypt, suggesting that only a minority of Cre reversion events occur during development in control mice (Figures 1c and d, 2a and c). Furthermore, because the overall frequency of β-gal+ crypts is low, β-gal+ foci involving more than one crypt likely represent a single Cre-activation event followed by crypt fission rather than Cre-activation in adjacent crypts (<0.1% chance of independent adjacent crypt activation).
Figure 1

Increased crypt fission in Apc mice

β-gal+ foci counted in whole mount (a, b), or sections of the proximal small intestine (c, d). (a) Note, there was no significant difference in the total number of β-gal+ foci between the three genotypes. (b) However, there was a significant increase in the number of “larger” β-gal+ foci, those involving more than three villi in Apc mice (p=0.02). (c) In sections of the proximal small intestine, there was no significant difference in the percentage of β-gal+ foci. (d) In contrast, we did observe an increase in the percentage of β-gal+ foci involving more than one crypt in Apc mice (p=0.001).

Figure 2

Increased number of larger β-gal+ foci in Apc mice

(a–d) Whole mount images of proximal small intestine of Apc and Apc mice. Adenomas denoted with circles and larger normal β-gal+ foci with arrows. (b, d) Images showing examples of larger normal β-gal+ foci in Apc mice. (e) Distribution of β-gal+ foci sizes in the proximal small intestine of Apc, Apc and Apc mice. Apc and Apc mice show a significant increase in β-gal+ foci involving 3 villi (p=0.01). Apc show a significant increase in β-gal+ foci involving 6 and 10 or more villi (p=0.02 and p=0.03, respectively).

Stochastic loss of a single Apc allele in individual crypts

To determine if stochastic inactivation of one Apc allele detectably alters intestinal homeostasis, we combined the Pms2 allele with a conditional, floxed Apc allele, Apc (Kuraguchi et al., 2006). No microadenomas or adenomas were seen in the Pms2; Apc mice (average age of 116 days). There were no significant differences in the numbers or sizes of β-gal+ patches between Apc and Apc mice (p=0.97 and p=0.46) (Figures 1a and b). However, the numbers of β-gal+ foci with staining of 3 adjacent villi were increased in Apc mice compared to Apc mice (p=0.01) (Figure 2e). Because a single crypt can contribute cells to typically at most 3 villi (Lopez-Garcia et al., 2010; Miller et al., 2008), the proportions of β-gal+ foci with 3 adjacent stained villi can serve as an indicator of crypts harboring a majority of recombined cells. Therefore, these results suggest that loss of a single Apc allele confers a selective advantage over adjacent wild type cells, more often leading to dominance within the crypt. However, this selective advantage is limited because somatic loss of only a single Apc allele did not detectably increase crypt fission (Figure 1d) or lead to transformation.

“Simultaneous” loss of both Apc alleles within individual crypts

Next, we examined Pms2; Apc; Rosa-β-gal mice to determine whether the simultaneous loss of both Apc alleles altered intestinal homeostasis. We use the term “simultaneous” in a relative sense to distinguish such somatic loss of both alleles within a single cell lineage from “stepwise” loss, in which one defective Apc allele is inherited followed by stochastic somatic loss of the remaining allele (see below). We realize that Cre recombination at the two Apc alleles in Pms2; Apc; Rosa-β-gal mice may occur over time in a particular cell lineage and not necessarily within the same cell cycle. In contrast to Apc or Apc mice, Apc mice developed anemia and were sacrificed at an average age of 114 days. Consistent with stochastic Cre-activation, β-gal+ foci were scattered throughout the intestines, with similar number of β-gal+ foci measured in both whole mount and sections when compared to either Apc or Apc mice (p=0.24 and p=0.97) (Figures 1a and c). However, the phenotypic consequences of simultaneous Apc loss were significantly different. As expected with complete Apc inactivation, β-gal+ macroscopic adenomas were now present, with an average of 90 adenomas in the small intestine. In whole mount, ~4% of spots were scored as adenomas; however, smaller changes such as microadenomas are difficult to score when examining the intestine in whole mount. Therefore, to determine the percentage of abnormal β-gal+ foci, we examined sections from the proximal small intestine. Interestingly, only 17% (22/129) of β-gal+ foci in the proximal small intestine of Apc mice were morphologically abnormal (microadenoma or adenoma) (Figure 3). However, there were other phenotypic consequences of simultaneous Apc loss in the absence of morphological transformation. Notably, Apc mice had a significantly higher proportion of β-gal+ foci involving either more than 3 villi or multiple adjacent crypts when compared to either Apc or Apc mice (p=0.02 and p=0.001) (Figures 1b and d, 2b and d). We note that the increased clonal expansion seen in Apc, but not in Apc mice, supports efficient Cre recombination at both Apc alleles. These results demonstrate that simultaneous loss of both Apc alleles, likely occurring during intestinal development, confers additional selective advantages over surrounding wild type cells, but separates clonal expansion from transformation. Clonal expansion, manifested by crypt fission (larger β-gal+ patches), without transformation was as common as clonal expansion with morphologic transformation.
Figure 3

Distribution of normal and adenomatous β-gal+ foci

(a) Images of different representative β-gal+ foci illustrating a single β-gal+ cell, single β-gal+ crypt, multiple β-gal+ crypts, β-gal+ microadenoma and β-gal+ adenoma. (b) Percentage of the β-gal+ foci illustrated in (a).

Apc target alleles are efficiently recombined in β-gal+ foci

In principle, Cre expression following frameshift reversion should result in efficient recombination of multiple floxed alleles because Cre expression should persist. As pointed out above, the increased crypt fission in Apc but not in Apc mice supports efficient recombination at both alleles. Nevertheless, the low percentage of β-gal+ foci in the Pms2; Apc; Rosa-β-gal mice showing morphologic transformation might be explained by inefficient recombination of both Apc alleles. To verify Cre recombination efficiency, we used laser capture microdissection (LCM) on tissue cross sections to isolate β-gal+ cells from normal appearing crypts or adenomas (Figures 4a–c). Next, we used quantitative PCR to measure the relative proportions of the recombined versus unrecombined Apc allele in microdissected samples enriched for β-gal+ cells (Figure 4d). As expected, β-gal+ adenomas showed significant enrichment for the recombined allele compared to β-gal− and Apc samples (p<0.001). For morphologically normal β-gal+ foci, 76% (16/21) showed a significant 6–10 fold increase in signal of the recombined Apc allele over β-gal− cells and a significant 2–3 fold increase over Apc cells (p<0.001 for both). Also, consistent with recombination of both Apc alleles in the normal appearing β-gal+ crypts, the enrichment of the recombined Apc allele in normal appearing β-gal+ tissue was similar to that found in adenoma tissue (p=0.85) (Figure 4e). These results show that Apc is efficiently recombined in at least 75% of morphologically normal β-gal+ crypts suggesting that the majority of these normal appearing crypts are indeed Apc-deficient.
Figure 4

Apc is efficiently recombined in Pms2; Apc mice

Images of (a) β-gal− crypts, (b) β-gal+ crypts and (c) adenomas from the proximal small intestine isolated on LCM CAPs. (d) Gel of PCR reactions for the different isolated cell types. CKO is the unrecombined allele and Δ is the recombined allele. Each gel was normalized to the signal obtained from an Apc sample, which has a 1:1 ratio of recombined:unrecombined Apc alleles. (e) Graph of normalized recombined:unrecombined ratios that illustrates that 76% (16/21) of normal appearing β-gal+ samples had a 6–10 fold increase in the recombined:unrecombined ratio over β-gal− cells (p<0.001), similar to the increase observed for the adenoma samples (p=0.85).

Characteristics of Cre-reporter foci in Apc mice

To further examine morphologically normal β-gal+ or GFP+ crypts, most of which are Apc-deficient, we measured Wnt-dependent signaling, apoptosis and differentiation. Following Apc loss it is expected that: WNT signaling be activated as reported by β-catenin deregulation, apoptosis be increased as reported by TUNEL, and the villus cell marker alkaline phosphatase be eliminated (Sansom et al., 2004). As expected, all β-gal+ or GFP+ foci that were scored as adenomas or microadenomas showed deregulated β-catenin expression (Figures 5a, g–i), increased TUNEL staining (Figure 5b) and a lack of alkaline phosphatase (Figure 5c). However, these changes were not seen in morphologically normal β-gal+ or GFP+ crypts and villi. First, all normal appearing β-gal+ or GFP+ fociexamined (30/30) from Apc mice showed normal levels and localization of β-catenin (Figures 5d, j-l). Second, only 7% (4/56) of normal appearing β-gal+ crypts had evidence of apoptosis, similar to the level of apoptosis in neighboring β-gal− crypts (54/1399) (Χ2=1.2, p=0.28) (Figure 5e). Finally, 10/10 β-gal+ villi examined expressed alkaline phosphatase, whereas all adenomas examined did not stain for alkaline phosphatase (Yate’s Χ2=7.9, p=0.005) (Figure 5f). These results illustrate further that when normal morphology is retained after simultaneous inactivation of both Apc alleles, the increased crypt dominance and fission is not accompanied by significant changes in β-catenin, apoptosis or differentiation.
Figure 5

Characteristics of Cre-reporter+ foci

Characterization of Cre-Reporter+ tumor (a–c, g–i) and normal (d–f, j–l) tissue. (a, d) Show deregulated expression of β-catenin in GFP+ tumor tissue (single arrowheads), but normal β-catenin expression in normal GFP+ tissue (single arrowheads) (β-catenin:blue, mTomato:red[unrecombined], mGFP:green[recombined]). Double arrowheads point out unrecombined, epithelial tissue. (b, e) Show increased apoptosis in β-gal+ tumor tissue, but normal apoptosis levels in normal, β-gal+ tissue (β-gal+:blue, TUNEL:brown). Arrows denote TUNEL positive cells. (c, f) Loss of alkaline phosphatase staining in β-gal+ tumor tissue, but continued expression of alkaline phosphatase in normal, β-gal+ tissue (β-gal+:blue, alkaline phosphatase:purple). In c) arrows show demarcation of alkaline phosphatase and X-gal staining. In f) purple and blue lines illustrate the overlap of alkaline phosphatase and β-gal+ cells. (g, j) Merged images of immunofluorescence for β-catenin (red), β-gal (green) and DAPI (blue). Arrows point to the same β-gal+ regions. (h, k) Shown are images of only the β-gal (green) channel. (i, l) Images of only the β-catenin (red) channel. Note, deregulated β-catenin expression n the tumor, but normal β-catenin pattern in the normal tissue.

Attempts to generate Pms2cre/cre; Apc580S/580S mice

Previous studies by others suggested that isolated functional loss of both Apc alleles in mouse intestinal stem cells was sufficient for transformation (Akyol et al., 2008; Barker et al., 2009). However, these studies were performed with a different conditional Apc allele, Apc, from the Apc allele used here in our study. For a more direct comparison of our findings with these other studies, we attempted to generate Pms2 mice. We first generated Pms2; Apc and Pms2cre/+; ApcCKO/CKO mice. Next, we performed Pms2cre/+; Apc580S/580S × Pms2cre/+; Apc580S/580S and Pms2cre/+; ApcCKO/CKO × Pms2cre/+; ApcCKO/CKO matings, which are expected to yield 1 in 4 mice being Pms2cre/cre and either Apc580S/580S or ApcCKO/CKO. While we were able to generate mice homozygous for the ApcCKO allele in the expected Mendelian ratios (1:2:1) (15 Pms2+/+:35 Pms2cre/+:14 Pms2cre/cre) (Yate’s Χ2=0.35, p=0.84), we were unsuccessful in generating Pms2cre/cre; Apc580S/580S mice (9 Pms2+/+:22 Pms2cre/+:0 Pms2cre/cre) (Yate’s Χ2=9.9, p=0.007). In addition, other crosses designed to generate Pms2cre/cre; Apc580S/580S mice, albeit at a lower expected frequency, also failed to yield the desired genotype.

The Apc allele is expressed at wild type levels

Previous studies have reported that the conditional Apc allele is hypomorphic, even prior to Cre recombination (Buchert ; Shibata ). The Apc allele used here, Apc (Kuraguchi et al., 2006), when acted on by Cre results in the same deletion of exon 14 and truncation of Apc at amino acid 580. However, in the Apc allele, the neomycin cassette was removed via FLP recombination, whereas the Apc allele retains the neomycin cassette, possibly accounting for its hypomorphic nature (Shibata et al., 1997). To determine the expression level of the Apc allele, we measured Apc RNA levels by quantitative Real-Time PCR (qRT-PCR). While the Apc small intestine expressed only 40% of wild type Apc RNA levels, in agreement with a previous estimate (Shibata et al., 1997), the Apc small intestine expressed 101% of wild type Apc RNA levels (Table 1). In addition, whereas Apc mice are viable (see below), Apc mice die in utero, presumably due to significantly reduced overall Apc levels (Buchert et al., 2010). We conclude that the inability to generate Pms2 mice described above is also due to embryonic lethality.
Table 1

Quantitative Real Time PCR for Apc expression levels in the small intestine

ApcActin and GAPDHΔ CTΔΔ CT% Apc+/+
CTCT
Apc+/+25.4814.0711.410100
ApcCKO/CKO24.1112.7111.400.01101
Apc580S/580S26.2713.5312.74−1.3340

CT = cycle threshold (same threshold level of fluorescence for all samples)

ΔCT = CT (Apc) − CT (actin and GAPDH)

ΔΔCT = ΔCT (Apc) − ΔCT (Apc or Apc)

%Apc = 2ΔΔCt × 100

“Stepwise” Apc loss results in more efficient transformation

The surprising finding that simultaneous Apc loss, when starting from normal Apc expression levels, frequently leads to clonal expansion (crypt fission) without morphologic transformation led us to use our system to determine the consequence of stepwise Apc loss, in which overall levels of Apc are reduced prior to complete Apc loss. We combined the Apc allele with one of two germline Apc mutations, Apc or Apc. The Min allele, expressing a protein truncated at amino acid 850, results in ~50 adenomas at 6 months of age (Moser et al., 1990) (data not shown). The 1638N allele results in truncation at amino acid 1638, is hypomorphic (~2% of wt) and predisposes to ~10 adenomas at 9 months of age (Smits et al., 1998) (data not shown). These two germline Apc alleles mimic the two different forms of FAP, normal and attenuated, based on differences in adenoma burden and onset of anemia. Both Apc and Apc mice became anemic at ~60 days of age, significantly more rapidly than the 114 days for Apc mice (p<0.001) (Figure 6a). Apc mice had an average number of 171 adenomas in the small intestine, a significant increase (p=0.01) relative to Apc mice. Apc mice had an average of 225 adenomas in the small intestine, significantly more than Apc mice (p=0.00002), but not significantly different from Apc mice (p=0.11) (Figure 6b). The percentage of β-gal+ cells in adenomas was similar between all three genotypes (Apc, Apc and Apc) (Χ2=4.2, p=0.4), but different from Apc mice (Χ2=132.4, p<0.001), suggesting that Cre recombination is responsible for adenoma formation (Figure 7). Examination of the proximal small intestine cross sections revealed that 82% (47/57) and 88% (50/57) of β-gal+ foci in the Apc and Apc mice, respectively, were scored as either a microadenoma or adenoma, indicating a significant five-fold increase when compared to Apc mice (Χ2=72.5, p<0.001 and Χ2=83.2, p<0.001) (Figure 3). Nearly all crypts (>80%) undergo transformation after stepwise loss of Apc, which is in marked contrast to the minority of crypts (<20%) that undergo transformation after simultaneous Apc loss, in which overall Apc levels are normal. We propose based on the contrasting “simultaneous” versus “stepwise” results reported here that the overall Apc landscape can influence the consequences of Apc loss.
Figure 6

Increased tumor formation in Apc and Apc mice

(a) Survival curve illustrating that Apc (red squares) and Apc (green triangles) mice become anemic at an earlier age than Apc (blue diamonds) mice (p<0.001). (b) Increased number of small intestinal adenomas in Apc and Apc mice compared to Apc mice (p=0.01).

Figure 7

Percentage of β-gal+ cells in proximal small intestine adenomas

(a) Whole mount image of β-gal+ adenomas in Apc mice. Single-headed arrow shows a tumor scored as 100% β-gal+. Double-headed arrow shows a tumor scored as 50% β-gal+. (b) Classification of adenomas into % β-gal+ in the proximal small intestine.

DISCUSSION

Progression to cancer is thought to occur through the acquisition of somatic changes associated with increasingly larger and more dysplastic precancerous lesions. Reconstruction of tumor progression is difficult because mutations can occur anywhere within the genome and serial observations are impractical. Human cancer genomes are difficult to interpret because they contain thousands of mutations. Most mutations are neutral “passenger” mutations and each cancer genome appears to be unique (Pleasance et al., 2010). For colorectal cancer, only a few genes (APC, TP53, KRAS) are mutated at frequencies above 15% (Attolini et al., 2010; Forbes et al., 2010; Sjoblom et al., 2006). Consistent with the hypothesis that APC is a gatekeeper gene (Kinzler and Vogelstein, 1996), APC mutations are found in many human colorectal cancers and are the most common mutation in adenomas (Forbes et al., 2010). Mouse models facilitate testing of the specific roles of certain mutations, either in a familial, or germline, context, or with conditional models that create specific mutations sometime after birth. Here, we use the Pms2 mouse system, which models several aspects of sporadic tumorigenesis, namely that mutations can occur anytime after conception, do not require external manipulations, and altered cells are initially isolated and surrounded by unaltered cells (Miller et al., 2008). In this system, Cre-mediated Apc deletion occurs stochastically in single isolated cells throughout life, induced by mutational slippage of an out-of-frame cre allele. The Pms2 mice used in this study are DNA mismatch repair (MMR) compromised, resulting in an increased rate of Cre reversion. The increased Cre reversion rate allowed us to achieve an optimal number of tumors by 4 months of age. Granted, MMR deficiency could have other consequences. However, because the control (those without conditional Apc alleles) and experimental mice (those with conditional Apc alleles) contain the same MMR defect, any consistent differences between the groups of mice should be due to the presence of the conditional alleles. Using the Pms2 system, we examined the consequences of “simultaneous” versus “stepwise” Apc loss. What we define as simultaneous Apc loss, in which Apc levels are normal prior to Apc loss, resulted in increased crypt fission, but only 17% of β-gal+ crypts exhibited phenotypic dysplasia, i.e. adenoma formation and deregulated β-catenin expression. In contrast, we found that stepwise Apc loss, in which partial Apc deficiency due to an inherited mutation was followed by stochastic somatic Apc loss, resulted in >80% phenotypic dysplasia, consistent with other studies (Akyol et al., 2008; Barker et al., 2009). Our findings reveal that the gatekeeper role of Apc is surprisingly complex because simultaneous Apc loss had different phenotypic consequences than stepwise Apc loss. One could say, based on our findings, that the gate can open in two steps and that the gatekeeper role of Apc can be divided into two parts---net cell proliferation and morphologic transformation. A notable difference between ours and another mouse study, which found essentially 100% tumorigenesis after induced homozygous Apc loss (Barker et al., 2009), is that the conditional Apc allele, Apc, used in that study is hypomorphic, based on lower than wild type expression prior to Cre recombination (Buchert et al., 2010). In contrast, we have shown that the Apc allele used here expresses Apc at a level similar to wild type. Therefore, the use of the Apc allele allows us to uniquely engineer the loss of Apc in single, isolated cell lineages in mice with an otherwise normal Apc landscape. Our results show that inheriting an Apc defect (“one-hit”) fosters increased transformation upon somatic Apc loss, whereas simultaneous somatic Apc loss, in which overall Apc levels are normal prior to loss, frequently conferred clonal expansion through increased crypt fission, but did not necessarily result in morphologic transformation. Although we believe that differences in overall Apc levels prior to Apc loss are important and can account for the contrasting results between our study and that of Barker et. al., the two Cre/lox systems employed do have some other relevant differences. The Lgr5-CreER mouse model (Barker ) utilizes a single, low dose of tamoxifen to induce Cre recombination. Therefore, Apc loss occurs at a fixed point in time and likely within a limited time frame. Although both the Pms2 and Lgr5-CreER systems resulted in a similar percentage of Apc-deficient (β-gal+) crypts, it is possible that the slow accumulation of Apc cells occurring in Pms2 mice, as opposed to cells becoming Apc within a limited time frame in the Lgr5-CreER mice is another contributing factor. Regardless, it will be important to compare the two different, conditional Apc alleles using the Lgr5-CreER system. It is commonly presumed that Apc cells are absent when visible intestinal lesions are not present. However, the occult presence of Apc cells with normal morphologies rather than lack of mutation may better explain why chemoprevention with Sulindac in FAP patients initially causes polyp regression, but polyps subsequently reappear, with progression even to cancer (Cruz-Correa et al., 2002; Lynch, 2010). Rather than eliminating Apc cells, visible regression with Sulindac may instead represent metaplastic conversion back to a normal histology. The presence or persistence of normal appearing Apc cells would complicate surveillance efforts to prevent CRC. The additional alterations required for morphologic transformation following simultaneous homozygous Apc loss are uncertain, but such changes may evolve more readily after stepwise loss of the first Apc allele. Notably, although Apc intestines appear morphologically normal, their circuitry is altered because expression and proteomic profiles differ between Apc and Apc cells (Patel et al., 2011; Wang et al., 2010; Yeung et al., 2008). An acquired epigenetic mechanism or state present in Apc cells, but not in Apc cells, could modulate Apc cell phenotypic plasticity. Supporting a requisite epigenetic role in transformation, polyp formation in Apc mice is decreased when DNA methylation is inhibited (Eads et al., 2002; Laird et al., 1995), even though hypomethylation has been associated with both increased and decreased mutation rates (Chan et al., 2001; Chen et al., 1998). Alternatively Apc cells may still arise in Apc mice, but more often retain normal morphologies when DNA methylation is inhibited. Our findings with simultaneous Apc loss in mice suggest that Apc cells frequently retained a normal phenotype, thus raising the possibility that Apc-deficient cells could exist in the human colon and go undetected by conventional screening techniques. But APC is almost certainly lost in a stepwise fashion in human CRC, thus normal appearing, APC-deficient cells might be uncommon in the human colon. However, the Apc and Apc alleles used to determine the consequences of stepwise loss of Apc are constitutive mutants, thus not only is Apc reduced in the cell that will become transformed upon Apc loss, but Apc levels are also reduced throughout the mouse. Thus, partial loss of Apc activity may lead to a more transformation-prone state due to cell autonomous effects such as abnormal spindle orientation (Quyn et al., 2010). Alternatively, there could be cell non-autonomous effects such as cross-talk between myofibroblasts and the epithelium (Quante ; Vermeulen ). Studies with stochastic Apc loss targeting specific cell types should help distinguish between such explanations and elucidate further the important cell types involved in intestinal cancer. The high frequency of APC mutations in human colorectal carcinomas indicates that APC function is usually lost during progression. The engineered isolated and simultaneous homozygous deletion of Apc in mice indicates that Apc loss can lead to clonal expansion but is usually insufficient for morphologic transformation. Our studies illustrate that the phenotypic plasticity observed in human cancers is also present very early in progression (Quintana et al., 2010). Further studies with different constellations of Cre-target genes can specifically test whether certain mutation combinations are sufficient for various stages of tumorigenesis. For example, using our system we found that Kras activation also resulted in clonal expansion without morphologic transformation (Miller et al., 2008). Potentially, the full malignant phenotype, including metastasis, can be engineered by Cre-mediated recombination of multiple oncogenes and/or tumor suppressor genes, thus facilitating specific testing of which combination(s) of pathway disruptions are necessary or sufficient for progression.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Mice

Two different R26R (Rosa26 Reporter mice with either lox-stop-lox LacZ or pCAGG lox-mTomato-lox mGFP) alleles were used. Mice were housed in a specific pathogen free HEPA filtered room and were fed a diet of Purina PicoLab Rodent Diet 20.

Scoring of β-gal+ foci in whole mount intestine

At least 20 β-gal+ foci were counted for each third of the small intestine. Nearby β-gal+ foci were considered independent if not arising from the same crypt and surrounded by non-staining crypts. Adenomas, which involved multiple villi, were scored by whole mount and in cross sections. Microadenomas, involving a single villus, were determined by scoring cross sections.

Laser capture microdissection of intestinal tissue for PCR

Sections were examined using an ArcturusXT LCM instrument (Applied Biosystems) and β-gal+ or β-gal− crypts/villi were attached to a CapSure Macro LCM Cap (Applied Biosystems) with an infrared laser. Band intensity was used to measure the relative ratio of recombined to unrecombined DNA (Quantity One, Bio-Rad). A sample known to contain a 1:1 ratio of recombined to unrecombined, run on each gel, was used to normalize against unknown samples.

Immunofluorescence

Sections were incubated in primary antibody (rabbit anti-β-catenin H-102, SantaCruz; TRITC-conjugated mouse anti-β-catenin, BD Transduction Labs; or rabbit anti-β-galactosidase, Immunology Consultants Laboratory) diluted 1:100 overnight at 4°C, washed in TBST then incubated in secondary antibody (anti-rabbit AlexaFluor 488, 555 or 633, Invitrogen) diluted 1:100 for 1 hour at RT.

Statistics

Data were analyzed with StatPlus for Mac in Microsoft Excel. Fisher LSD post-hoc test was used after ANOVA test. Chi2 analysis was performed using a 2X2 or 2X3 Table.
  35 in total

1.  Rapid colorectal adenoma formation initiated by conditional targeting of the Apc gene.

Authors:  H Shibata; K Toyama; H Shioya; M Ito; M Hirota; S Hasegawa; H Matsumoto; H Takano; T Akiyama; K Toyoshima; R Kanamaru; Y Kanegae; I Saito; Y Nakamura; K Shiba; T Noda
Journal:  Science       Date:  1997-10-03       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 2.  Lessons from hereditary colorectal cancer.

Authors:  K W Kinzler; B Vogelstein
Journal:  Cell       Date:  1996-10-18       Impact factor: 41.582

3.  DNA hypomethylation leads to elevated mutation rates.

Authors:  R Z Chen; U Pettersson; C Beard; L Jackson-Grusby; R Jaenisch
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1998-09-03       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Apc1638N: a mouse model for familial adenomatous polyposis-associated desmoid tumors and cutaneous cysts.

Authors:  R Smits; W van der Houven van Oordt; A Luz; C Zurcher; S Jagmohan-Changur; C Breukel; P M Khan; R Fodde
Journal:  Gastroenterology       Date:  1998-02       Impact factor: 22.682

5.  The consensus coding sequences of human breast and colorectal cancers.

Authors:  Tobias Sjöblom; Siân Jones; Laura D Wood; D Williams Parsons; Jimmy Lin; Thomas D Barber; Diana Mandelker; Rebecca J Leary; Janine Ptak; Natalie Silliman; Steve Szabo; Phillip Buckhaults; Christopher Farrell; Paul Meeh; Sanford D Markowitz; Joseph Willis; Dawn Dawson; James K V Willson; Adi F Gazdar; James Hartigan; Leo Wu; Changsheng Liu; Giovanni Parmigiani; Ben Ho Park; Kurtis E Bachman; Nickolas Papadopoulos; Bert Vogelstein; Kenneth W Kinzler; Victor E Velculescu
Journal:  Science       Date:  2006-09-07       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  A targeted chain-termination mutation in the mouse Apc gene results in multiple intestinal tumors.

Authors:  R Fodde; W Edelmann; K Yang; C van Leeuwen; C Carlson; B Renault; C Breukel; E Alt; M Lipkin; P M Khan
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1994-09-13       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Suppression of intestinal neoplasia by DNA hypomethylation.

Authors:  P W Laird; L Jackson-Grusby; A Fazeli; S L Dickinson; W E Jung; E Li; R A Weinberg; R Jaenisch
Journal:  Cell       Date:  1995-04-21       Impact factor: 41.582

8.  Generating somatic mosaicism with a Cre recombinase-microsatellite sequence transgene.

Authors:  Aytekin Akyol; Takao Hinoi; Ying Feng; Guido T Bommer; Thomas M Glaser; Eric R Fearon
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2008-02-10       Impact factor: 28.547

9.  Tractable Cre-lox system for stochastic alteration of genes in mice.

Authors:  Ashleigh J Miller; Sandra D Dudley; Jen-Lan Tsao; Darryl Shibata; R Michael Liskay
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2008-02-10       Impact factor: 28.547

10.  Adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) is required for normal development of skin and thymus.

Authors:  Mari Kuraguchi; Xiu-Ping Wang; Roderick T Bronson; Rebecca Rothenberg; Nana Yaw Ohene-Baah; Jennifer J Lund; Melanie Kucherlapati; Richard L Maas; Raju Kucherlapati
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2006-07-28       Impact factor: 5.917

View more
  10 in total

1.  Occult progression by Apc-deficient intestinal crypts as a target for chemoprevention.

Authors:  Jared M Fischer; Arnout G Schepers; Hans Clevers; Darryl Shibata; R Michael Liskay
Journal:  Carcinogenesis       Date:  2013-08-29       Impact factor: 4.944

Review 2.  Pathology of rodent models of intestinal cancer: progress report and recommendations.

Authors:  Mary Kay Washington; Anne E Powell; Ruth Sullivan; John P Sundberg; Nicholas Wright; Robert J Coffey; William F Dove
Journal:  Gastroenterology       Date:  2013-02-12       Impact factor: 22.682

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

Authors:  Jared M Fischer; Sandra Dudley; Ashleigh J Miller; R Michael Liskay
Journal:  DNA Repair (Amst)       Date:  2015-12-29

4.  Single cell lineage tracing reveals a role for TgfβR2 in intestinal stem cell dynamics and differentiation.

Authors:  Jared M Fischer; Peter P Calabrese; Ashleigh J Miller; Nina M Muñoz; William M Grady; Darryl Shibata; R Michael Liskay
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-10-10       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Dietary Methyl Donor Depletion Suppresses Intestinal Adenoma Development.

Authors:  Matthew P Hanley; Krishna Kadaveru; Christine Perret; Charles Giardina; Daniel W Rosenberg
Journal:  Cancer Prev Res (Phila)       Date:  2016-08-16

Review 6.  More than two decades of Apc modeling in rodents.

Authors:  Maged Zeineldin; Kristi L Neufeld
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2013-01-17

7.  Inducible loss of one Apc allele in Lrig1-expressing progenitor cells results in multiple distal colonic tumors with features of familial adenomatous polyposis.

Authors:  Anne E Powell; Gregory Vlacich; Zhen-Yang Zhao; Eliot T McKinley; M Kay Washington; H Charles Manning; Robert J Coffey
Journal:  Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol       Date:  2014-05-15       Impact factor: 4.052

8.  Tumorigenic fragments of APC cause dominant defects in directional cell migration in multiple model systems.

Authors:  Scott A Nelson; Zhouyu Li; Ian P Newton; David Fraser; Rachel E Milne; David M A Martin; David Schiffmann; Xuesong Yang; Dirk Dormann; Cornelis J Weijer; Paul L Appleton; Inke S Näthke
Journal:  Dis Model Mech       Date:  2012-04-05       Impact factor: 5.758

9.  E-cadherin can limit the transforming properties of activating β-catenin mutations.

Authors:  David J Huels; Rachel A Ridgway; Sorina Radulescu; Marc Leushacke; Andrew D Campbell; Sujata Biswas; Simon Leedham; Stefano Serra; Runjan Chetty; Guenievre Moreaux; Lee Parry; James Matthews; Fei Song; Ann Hedley; Gabriela Kalna; Fatih Ceteci; Karen R Reed; Valerie S Meniel; Aoife Maguire; Brendan Doyle; Ola Söderberg; Nick Barker; Alastair Watson; Lionel Larue; Alan R Clarke; Owen J Sansom
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  2015-08-03       Impact factor: 11.598

Review 10.  Direct measurements of human colon crypt stem cell niche genetic fidelity: the role of chance in non-darwinian mutation selection.

Authors:  Haeyoun Kang; Darryl Shibata
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2013-10-14       Impact factor: 6.244

  10 in total

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