| Literature DB >> 24860787 |
Enara Aguirre1, Oliver Renner1, Maja Narlik-Grassow1, Carmen Blanco-Aparicio1.
Abstract
The PIM proteins, which were initially discovered as proviral insertion sites in Moloney-murine leukemia virus infection, are a family of highly homologous serine/threonine kinases that have been reported to be overexpressed in hematological malignancies and solid tumors. The PIM proteins have also been associated with metastasis and overall treatment responses and implicated in the regulation of apoptosis, metabolism, the cell cycle, and homing and migration, which makes these proteins interesting targets for anti-cancer drug discovery. The use of retroviral insertional mutagenesis and refined approaches such as complementation tagging has allowed the identification of myc, pim, and a third group of genes (including bmi1 and gfi1) as complementing genes in lymphomagenesis. Moreover, mouse modeling of human cancer has provided an understanding of the molecular pathways that are involved in tumor initiation and progression at the physiological level. In particular, genetically modified mice have allowed researchers to further elucidate the role of each of the Pim isoforms in various tumor types. PIM kinases have been identified as weak oncogenes because experimental overexpression in lymphoid tissue, prostate, and liver induces tumors at a relatively low incidence and with a long latency. However, very strong synergistic tumorigenicity between Pim1/2 and c-Myc and other oncogenes has been observed in lymphoid tissues. Mouse models have also been used to study whether the inhibition of specific PIM isoforms is required to prevent carcinogen-induced sarcomas, indicating that the absence of Pim2 and Pim3 greatly reduces sarcoma growth and bone invasion; the extent of this effect is similar to that observed in the absence of all three isoforms. This review will summarize some of the animal models that have been used to understand the isoform-specific contribution of PIM kinases to tumorigenesis.Entities:
Keywords: Pim kinases; carcinogens; knock-out; proviral tagging; transgenics; tumors
Year: 2014 PMID: 24860787 PMCID: PMC4030178 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Pim1 as a proviral integration site.
| Virus | Mouse strain | Locus of insertion (frequency %) | Tumor type |
|---|---|---|---|
| M-MuLV | BALB/c, C57BL | 3′Region of | Early T-cell lymphoma ( |
| M-MuLV | BALB/c, C57BL | 3′Region of | Early T-cell lymphoma ( |
| M-MuLV | BALB/c | 3′and 5′Regions of | Early and late T-cell lymphoma ( |
| M-MuLV | BALB/c, C57BL | Oligoclonal and monoclonal in | Early T-cell lymphoma ( |
| M-MuLV | AKXD | 3′Region of | T- and B-cell lymphomas ( |
| Ecotropic virus | HRS/J, C58/J | 3′Region of | T-cell lymphoma ( |
| Mo+, Mo + PYwt, Mo + PyF441 M-MuLVs | NIH Swiss | Lymphoblastic lymphoma ( | |
| M-MuLV | BALB/c, C57BL, B6 nude (nu/nu) | No insertion at the | B-cell lymphomas ( |
| Transplanted lymphomas induced by M-MuLV | BALB/c, C57BL10 | Retain integration in | T-cell lymphoma ( |
| M-MuLV | BALB/c, C57BL10 | T-cell lymphoma ( | |
| Friend helper leukemia virus (F-MuLV) | ICFW | Erythroleukemia ( | |
| M-MuLV and bcr-abl/M | BALB/c | M-MuLV: | Thymoma ( |
| Graffi murine leukemia viruses | Balb/c and NFS | Myeloblastic leukemia ( |
Mouse models overexpressing Pim proteins.
| Mouse model | Expression of transgene | Phenotype |
|---|---|---|
| B- and T-cells | Enlargement of the spleen | |
| Monoclonal T-cell lymphoma with high expression of c-myc; 10% penetrance, 240 weeks latency ( | ||
| B- and T-cells | No spontaneous tumors ( | |
| Lymphoid lineage: higher expression in B lymphoid cells than in myeloid cells | Enhanced hematopoiesis, higher BrdU incorporation in long-term HSC populations, and greater ability to reconstitute lethally irradiated mice | |
| Acute lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma; 10% penetrance, 20–62 weeks latency ( | ||
| Prostate and bladder epithelium | 100% of 10-month-old mice developed low-grade mPIN lesions | |
| The incidence of low-grade and high-grade mPIN lesions increases after two rounds of hormone treatment. All (100%) of the mice developed mPIN lesions at 24 weeks of age, with a 10% incidence of high-grade mPIN and | ||
| All (100%) of the mice developed high-grade bladder and urothelial hyperplasia after two rounds of hormone treatment, inducing pyelonephritis ( | ||
| B- and T-cells | T-cell lymphoma in 40% of the mice after 1 year ( | |
| Hepatocytes | No tumors after 1 year ( | |
| Tissue recombination model coupled with lentiviral-mediated gene transfer | Prostate cells from 6-week-old C57BL/6 mice infected with lentivirus | Pim1 is weakly oncogenic in naïve adult mouse prostatic epithelium. However, it cooperates dramatically with c-myc to induce high-grade prostatic cancer with NE differentiation |
| 100% penetrance in 6 weeks ( |
Mouse models with deletions of the Pim proteins.
| Mouse model | Phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Erythrocyte microcytosis. Impaired response to IL7 and SF. HSCs showed impaired long-term hematopoietic repopulating capacity in secondary and competitive transplantations. Fail to consolidate enduring long-term potentiation | ( | |
| HSCs mice behaved normally in a long-term hematopoietic repopulating capacity in secondary and competitive transplantations | ( | |
| HSCs mice behaved normally in a long-term hematopoietic repopulating capacity in secondary and competitive transplantations | ( | |
| TKO mice exhibited reduced body size, a severely impaired | ( | |
| Absence of Pim2 and Pim3 greatly reduced the sarcoma growth induced by 3MC, to an extent similar that observed in the absence of all three isoforms. The lack of Pim2 and Pim3 reduced tumor-induced bone invasion by 70%, which is comparable to the reduction of tumor-induced bone invasion in the absence of all three isoforms | ( |
Proviral integration in the pim loci and cooperating oncogenes after M-MuLV infection of transgenic mice.
| Transgenic model | Integration site | Phenotype and latency (non-infected versus infected with M-MuLV) |
|---|---|---|
| c- | T-cell lymphomas | |
| N- | From 10 to 92% penetrance | |
| From 22 to 7–8 weeks average latency ( | ||
| T-cell lymphomas with 100% penetrance | ||
| c- | From 14 to 18 weeks average latency ( | |
| B-cell lymphomas | ||
| From 80 to 100% incidence | ||
| From 18 to 7 weeks average latency ( | ||
| B-cell lymphoma | ||
| No differences in penetrance (100%) or latency (50 days) ( | ||
| Mature B-cell lymphoma | ||
| No differences in penetrance or latency ( | ||
| Mature B-cell lymphoma | ||
| From 21 weeks of latency to 24 weeks of latency ( | ||
| T-cell lymphomas with 100% penetrance | ||
| From 14 to 8.5 weeks average latency ( | ||
| Lymphoblastic thymic lymphomas | ||
| From 3–33 to 100% penetrance | ||
| From 4 to 1 months average latency ( | ||
| c- | From plastocytomas to disseminated lymphoma | |
| N- | From 60 to 100% penetrance | |
| From 10 to 7 weeks average latency ( | ||
| c- | From pre-B-cell lymphoma and plastocytoma to clonal pre-B-, B-, and immature T-lymphoma | |
| From 3–15 to 100% penetrance | ||
| From up to 53 to 19 weeks average latency ( | ||
| B- and T-cell lymphoma with 100% penetrance | ||
| From 18–25 to 9 weeks average latency ( | ||
| From splenic B-cell lymphomas to T- and B-cell lymphomas | ||
| From 6 to 45.3% penetrance | ||
| From 26 to 11.5 weeks average latency ( | ||
| Diffuse high-grade T-cell lymphomas with 100% penetrance | ||
| From 18 to 11.5 weeks average latency ( | ||
| c- | ||
| c- | Thymic lymphoma | |
| From 6 to 100% penetrance | ||
| From 53 to 14 weeks ( | ||
| Increased levels of Pim1 w/o proviral integration in the | ||
| c- | From no tumors to 100% development of T-cell lymphoma between 11 and 14 weeks ( | |
| From no tumors to 80% lymphomas with a latency of 21 weeks ( | ||
| Thymomas with 100% penetrance | ||
| From 26 to 13 weeks average latency ( |
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Contribution of Pim1 overexpression to tumorigenesis in double-transgenic mouse models.
| Mouse model | Single-transgenic phenotype | Double-transgenic phenotype |
|---|---|---|
| E2a-Pbx1: 13% incidence lymphoma at 24 weeks H2K-pim1: no tumors in 1 year | Lethargy, respiratory distress, and abdominal distension due to aggressive lymphomas, 100% incidence at 13 weeks ( | |
| Pre-B-cell leukemia in uterus; 100% incidence ( | ||
| Monoclonal T-cell lymphoma; 10% incidence at 34 weeks of age | ||
| T-cell lymphomas; 80% incidence at 12 weeks ( | ||
| Monoclonal T-cell lymphoma; 10% incidence at 34 weeks of age | ||
| B- and pre-B-lymphomas; 95% incidence at 5 weeks of age ( | ||
| Monoclonal T-cell lymphoma; 10% incidence at 34 weeks of age | ||
| Thymus cellularity restored. T-cell lymphomas; 82% incidence at 16.2 weeks of age ( | ||
| Monoclonal T-cell lymphoma; 10% incidence at 34 weeks of age | ||
| T-cell lymphoma; 66% incidence at 36 weeks ( | ||
| Monoclonal T-cell lymphoma; 10% incidence at 34 weeks of age | ||
| T-cell lymphoma; 100% at 5 weeks ( | ||
| Monoclonal T-cell lymphoma; 10% incidence at 34 weeks of age | ||
| Thymus cellularity restored ( | ||
| Monoclonal T-cell lymphoma; 10% incidence at 34 weeks of age | ||
| T-cell lymphoma; 50% incidence at 26 weeks. High levels of expression of | ||
| Thymus cellularity restored in an age-dependent manner in | ||
| Monoclonal T-cell lymphoma; 10% incidence at 34 weeks of age | ||
| Severe leukemia, some harboring simultaneous T-cell lymphoma; 100% incidence at 3–4 weeks of age ( | ||
| Prostate and bladder epithelium | Hormone-induced high-grade mPIN lesions in cooperation with | |
| One round of hormone treatment induced high-grade bladder hyperplasia in cooperation with | ||
| 86% Penetrance in 16 weeks old mice ( |
Figure 1Which genes and proviral insertion sites cooperate with Pim1? In different mouse models, pim1 (green ellipse), pim2 (red ellipse), c-myc (blue ellipse), N-myc (brown ellipse) and Pal1/gfl1 (purple ellipse) are the more frequent proviral insertion sites in M-MuLV infection. The cooperation between Pim1 and some of these other genes has also been confirmed by bitransgenic mouse models (underlined and bold).
Carcinogens strongly induce tumorigenesis in Pim mouse models.
| Mouse model and phenotype | Carcinogen: dose and time of treatment | Carcinogen action | Phenotype | Increased levels of oncogenes or K-ras mutation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ENU 200, 60, 15, 4.1, or 0.1 mg/kg, 15 days after birth | Small alkyl DNA adducts | T-cell lymphomas: latency of 17 weeks for the highest dose and 34 weeks for the lowest doses Penetrance: 100–70% for the three highest doses and 20% for 4–0.1 mg 7 kg dose | Enhanced expression of c-myc without rearrangement or amplifications. Incidence of mutations: 4.5% | |
| ENU 50 mg/kg in combination with dietary administration of 4-HPR, DFMO as chemopreventive agents | Small alkyl DNA adducts | Infiltrative metastatic lymphomas. Only 4-HPR induces a dose-related delay in tumor progression | n.d. ( | |
| Diet of 0.03% PhiP for 7 months or 0.03% IQ for 6 months | Carcinogenic or mutagenic, respectively | Lymphoblastic lymphoma in 80% of the females and 27% of the males, 28.5 weeks after treatment | n.d. ( | |
| 25 and 100 mg/kg AAF, 1 and 3 mg/kg NDEA, 100 and 300 mg/kg 1,2-DCE, and 50 and 100 mg/kg BEN | Genotoxic procarcinogens | Pleomorphic, lymphocytic lymphomas, and leukemias. Small but significant increase in incidence of malignant lymphomas in males treated with a high dose of 2-AAF (3.4-fold), the females treated with high and low doses of NDEA (2.5-fold), and females treated with a high dose of 1,2-DCE (1.8-fold) | n.d. ( | |
| 4.3, 13, or 39 mg/kg oral administration of B[a]P for 13 weeks and topical administration of 10 μg TPA twice a week; 7 weeks interruption and 35 weeks of 3 μg treatment. 220 μg total TPA dose/mouse | B[a]P requires metabolism and generates bulky DNA adduct. TPA is a tumor promoter | Multicentric lymphoma and T-cell lymphomas with B[a]P B[a]P dose-dependent induction of lymphomas in males, starting at 25 days. Transgenic mice five time more sensitive that wild-type counterparts | 75% Of mice had increased | |
| Total body X-irradiation | DNA strand breaks | Dose-dependent incidence of T-cell lymphomas: (4 × 1.5 Gy X-ray: 100%; 4 × 1.0 Gy X-ray: 90%; 4 × 0.5 Gy X-ray: 28%) 36 weeks after the last dose | 75% Of mice had 5–20- fold expression of | |
| Mitomycin c, cumulative dose of 2.67–6.55 mg/kg | DNA cross-linking agent | 11–30% Of females developed T-cell lymphomas with no dose response effect | n.d. ( | |
| DEN 10 mg/kg | Liver injury | 81% Males developed hepatocellular carcinoma after DEN treatment for 10 months (versus 41% of wild-type mice) | n.d. ( | |
| AKR mice: spontaneous thymomas at >24 weeks old. MCF provirus integration: 17% | NMU 50 mg/kg, 4-week-old mice | Methylating agent; G-A transition mutations | Thymomas between 12 and 24 weeks | Ecotropic-like provirus integration; 3.84% |
| MMS 120 mg/kg, 4-week-old mice | Methylating agent: weak mutagen | Thymomas developed between 20 and 50 weeks in 100% of mice | MCF (mink cytopathic focus-forming) provirus integration 19.2% |
n.d., not determined.