| Literature DB >> 32050713 |
Pauline J Beckmann1, David A Largaespada1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Transposon mutagenesis has been used to model many types of human cancer in mice, leading to the discovery of novel cancer genes and insights into the mechanism of tumorigenesis. For this review, we identified over twenty types of human cancer that have been modeled in the mouse using Sleeping Beauty and piggyBac transposon insertion mutagenesis. We examine several specific biological insights that have been gained and describe opportunities for continued research. Specifically, we review studies with a focus on understanding metastasis, therapy resistance, and tumor cell of origin. Additionally, we propose further uses of transposon-based models to identify rarely mutated driver genes across many cancers, understand additional mechanisms of drug resistance and metastasis, and define personalized therapies for cancer patients with obesity as a comorbidity.Entities:
Keywords: animal modeling; cancer; transposon screen
Year: 2020 PMID: 32050713 PMCID: PMC7036786 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21031172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Systems for Cancer Functional Genomics.
| Mutagenesis System | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| CRISPR/Cas9 |
Genome wide Useful in loss and gain of function studies Bias can be eliminated by careful guide RNA library design |
Difficult to employ in primary cells, useful in only established cell lines Difficult to employ in vivo Difficult to select for phenotypes requiring multiple cooperating genetic alterations |
| Transposon |
Genome wide Useful in loss and gain of function studies Allows screens to be done in cell lines or primary cells in vivo Useful for selection of traits requiring multiple cooperating mutations Non-coding or regulatory regions of the genome can be identified |
Bias for or against parts of the genome due to local hopping and insertion site preference Some genes are unlikely to be activated by transposon insertion if first ATG is in exon 1 Some genes are unlikely to be inactivated due to their small size (e.g., microRNAs) Does not induce the full spectrum of mutations found in human cancers (e.g., point mutations and translocations) Transposon mutagenesis can create mutations not tagged by the transposon due to re-mobilization |
| Retroviruses |
Many have been isolated with various tissue tropisms Can activate endogenous promoters by enhancement mechanisms Do not require generation of new transgenic lines of mice |
Tend to not induce loss of function mutations, relatively few tumor suppressor genes identified in screens Systems generally found and not created, meaning there are no retroviruses useful for modeling many important types of cancer Tissue tropisms limit usefulness and types of cancer that can be modeled Generally, cells must be dividing for infection Many retroviruses have severe strain-specific effects and limitations |
Published Sleeping Beauty and piggyBac Cancer Screens in Mice.
| Tumor Type | Transposase | Transposon | Cre | Sensitizing Mutations | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Fibrosarcoma |
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| - |
| [ |
| Osteosarcoma |
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| Peripheral nerve sheath tumor |
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| [ |
| Histiocytic sarcoma |
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| - | [ |
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| Skin |
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| - |
| [ |
| Mammary |
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| [ |
| Pancreatic |
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| [ |
| Gastric adenoma |
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| [ |
| Intestinal tract |
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| [ |
| Liver |
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| [ |
| Lung |
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| [ |
| Prostate |
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| [ |
| Thyroid |
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| [ |
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| [ |
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| T cell leukemia |
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| - | [ |
| T cell lymphoma |
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| [ |
| B cell leukemia |
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| [ |
| B cell lymphoma |
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| [ |
| Acute myeloid leukemia |
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| [ |
| Mixture of T cell and B cell lymphoma, myeloid leukemia |
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| Erythroleukemia |
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| [ |
| Myeloid and lymphoid malignancies, thymus, spleen |
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| - | [ |
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| Medulloblastoma/CNS-ET * |
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| Glioma |
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| Skin, brain, airway, liver, leukemia, lymphoma, intestine |
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| Leukemia, medulloblastoma, glioma |
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| Skin, liver, lung, brain, lymphoma, sarcoma, mammary, colon, etc. |
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| - | - | [ |
| T cell and B cell leukemia, lymphoma, skin, sarcoma, intestinal tract, lung, liver, etc. |
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| - | - | [ |
| Prostate, mammary and skin carcinomas |
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| [ |
| Sarcoma, carcinoma, leukemia, resistance to MDM2 inhibition |
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| [ |
| Liver, lung carcinoma, skin carcinoma, lymphoma |
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| - | - | [ |
* CNS-ET—Embryonal tumor of the central nervous system.
Figure 1Sleeping Beauty (SB) transposons can be designed to randomly induce somatic cell gain and loss of function mutations. (A) Structure of a proto-typical transposon vector for somatic cell or cell line mutagenesis studies. A strong promoter followed by an exon with a splice donor (SD) is present to activate transcription of downstream exons. Splice acceptors (SA) and a bi-directional polyadenylation site (pA) are included to disrupt gene expression. (B) In mutagenized cells, transposons can activate endogenous proto-oncogenes or disrupt endogenous tumor suppressor genes depending on where insertion occurs and in what orientation. (C) Transposon transgenic mice are usually produced by standard pronuclear injection resulting in the generation of lines with multicopy concatomers. These are crossed to mice expressing the transposase to generate mice with somatic cell transposition.
Figure 2Future experiments for transposon insertional mutagenesis screens. (A,B) To identify drivers, induce tumor formation with insertional mutagenesis and implant tumors orthotopically into syngeneic recipients. (A) The primary tumor is expanded and removed before endpoint, allowing the metastatic lesions to expand and be harvested for driver analysis. (B) Implanted tumors are treated with a targeted inhibitor or left untreated and their drivers compared. (C) Mice undergoing mutagenesis are fed a normal or high fat diet. At endpoint all tumors are harvested and their drivers compared.