| Literature DB >> 26729168 |
Hiroyuki Kugoh1,2, Takahito Ohira3, Mitsuo Oshimura4.
Abstract
The development and progression of malignant tumors likely result from consecutive accumulation of genetic alterations, including dysfunctional tumor suppressor genes. However, the signaling mechanisms that underlie the development of tumors have not yet been completely elucidated. Discovery of novel tumor-related genes plays a crucial role in our understanding of the development and progression of malignant tumors. Chromosome engineering technology based on microcell-mediated chromosome transfer (MMCT) is an effective approach for identification of tumor suppressor genes. The studies have revealed at least five tumor suppression effects. The discovery of novel tumor suppressor genes provide greater understanding of the complex signaling pathways that underlie the development and progression of malignant tumors. These advances are being exploited to develop targeted drugs and new biological therapies for cancer.Entities:
Keywords: PITX1; TERT; chromosome engineering; melanoma; telomerase; tumor suppressor gene
Year: 2015 PMID: 26729168 PMCID: PMC4728451 DOI: 10.3390/cancers8010004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Construction of mouse A9 cells containing a single human chromosome.
Figure 2Chromosome transfer to cancer cells via MMCT.
The suppression effects of transformed phenotypes following introduction of normal human chromosomes into various tumor cell types.
| Transferred Chromosome | Cell Lines | Type | Mapping Region | Reference | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||||
| 1 | HT1080 (fibrosarcoma) | + | + | [ | ||||
| TE85(osteosarcoma) | + | [ | ||||||
| 143 B (TK-Ki-Ras-transformed TE85) | + | [ | ||||||
| CMV-Mj-HEL-1 (CMV-transfermed lung fibroblasts) | + | [ | ||||||
| 10W-2 (immortal Syrian hamster fibroblasts) | + | [ | ||||||
| Isikawa (uterine endomerial carcinoma) | + | * | ||||||
| HHUA (uterine endometrial carcinoma) | + | + | [ | |||||
| 2 | SiHa (cervical cancer) | + | 2q37 | [ | ||||
| 3 | RCC23 (renal cell carcinoma) | + | + | 3p21.3 | [ | |||
| KC12 (renal cell carcinoma) | + | + | 3p14.2-p21.1 | [ | ||||
| HSC3 (oral squamous cell carcinoma) | + | + | + | 3p21.2-p21.3 or 3p25 | [ | |||
| TS1 (lung adenocarcinoma) | + | * | ||||||
| 4 | HeLa (cevical cancer) | + | [ | |||||
| J82 (baladder cancer) | + | [ | ||||||
| T98G (glioblastoma) | + | [ | ||||||
| 5 | A2058 (melanoma) | + | + | [ | ||||
| 6 | HALneo (immortal fibroblasts) | + | [ | |||||
| LCS-AF.1-3 (immortal fibroblasts) | + | 6p23-p24 | [ | |||||
| 39neo (immortal fibroblasts) | + | [ | ||||||
| SV/HF (SV40-tranformed fibroblasts) | + | [ | ||||||
| HPV-16 (HPV-immortalized keratinocyte) | + | [ | ||||||
| 7 | KMST-6 (immortal fibroblasts) | + | [ | |||||
| SUSM-1 (immortal fibroblasts) | + | [ | ||||||
| CC1 (choriocarcinoma) | + | * | ||||||
| R-3327 (rat prostatic cancer cells) | + | 7q21-22, 7q31.2-32 | [ | |||||
| MeT5A (mesothelial cells) | + | + | [ | |||||
| 8 | R-3327 (rat prostatic cancer cells) | + | 8p21-q12 | [ | ||||
| 10 | Li7HM (hepatocellular carcinoma) | + | + | 10p15.1 | [ | |||
| R-3327 (rat prostatic cancer cells) | + | 10q11-22 | [ | |||||
| 11 | HeLa (cevical cancer) | + | [ | |||||
| G401 (wilm’s tumor) | + | + | [ | |||||
| SiHa (cervical cancer) | + | [ | ||||||
| A204 (rhadboyomyosarcoma) | + | [ | ||||||
| HHUA (uterine endometrial carcinoma) | + | [ | ||||||
| HT1080 (fibrosarcoma) | + | [ | ||||||
| RD (rhabdomyosarcoma) | + | [ | ||||||
| H15 (bladder cancer) | + | * | ||||||
| R-3327 (rat prostatic cancer cells) | + | 11p13-11.2 | [ | |||||
| 13 | R-3327 (rat prostatic cancer cells) | + | [ | |||||
| 17 | R-3327 (rat prostatic cancer cells) | + | 12p11-q13, 12q24-ter | [ | ||||
| 18 | HHUA (uterine endometrial carcinoma) | + | + | [ | ||||
| X | HocB (ovarian carcinoma) | + | * | |||||
| ELCO (breast carcinoma) | + | * | ||||||
Type 1: Induced senescence; Type 2: Suppression of in vitro transformed; Type 3: Suppression of tumorigenicity; Type 4: Suppression of telomerase activity; *: Unpublished data by the authors; +: Effective.
The suppression effects of transformed phenotypes following introduction of normal human chromosomes into the mouse melanoma B16-F10 cell line.
| Type 1 | Type 2 | Type 3 | Type 4 | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1, 2 | 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 15, 16, 19, 20 or 22 | 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, 19, 20, 22 or X | 5 | [ |
Type 1: Induced senescence; Type 2: Suppression of in vitro transformed; Type 3: Suppression of tumorigenicity; Type 4: Suppression of telomerase activity.
Figure 3Mapping of chromosome regions which coding tumor suppressor genes via the modification of MMCT.
Figure 4Identification of a functional suppressor gene by combination of MMCT and microarray.