Genomic Imprinting and Igf2 Influence Liver Tumorigenesis and Loss of Heterozygosity in SV40 T Antigen Transgenic Mice

R Haddad, WA Held - Cancer research, 1997 - AACR
R Haddad, WA Held
Cancer research, 1997AACR
Maternal-specific loss of heterozygosity (LOH) and allelic imbalances [ie, partial LOH
(pLOH)] observed in SV40 T/t antigen-induced liver tumors suggests that an imprinted gene
on chromosome 7 is involved in liver tumorigenesis. Maternal-specific LOH/pLOH may
reflect the loss of a maternally expressed tumor suppressor gene or the acquisition of
paternally active alleles of a growth promoter. In addition, two oppositely imprinted genes on
distal chromosome 7, Igf2 and H19, are re-expressed in most liver tumors from an SV40 T/t …
Abstract
Maternal-specific loss of heterozygosity (LOH) and allelic imbalances [i.e., partial LOH (pLOH)] observed in SV40 T/t antigen-induced liver tumors suggests that an imprinted gene on chromosome 7 is involved in liver tumorigenesis. Maternal-specific LOH/pLOH may reflect the loss of a maternally expressed tumor suppressor gene or the acquisition of paternally active alleles of a growth promoter. In addition, two oppositely imprinted genes on distal chromosome 7, Igf2 and H19, are re-expressed in most liver tumors from an SV40 T/t antigen transgenic line (M11T-G). Igf2 is a paternally expressed growth promoter, and H19 is a maternally expressed gene that can suppress growth in some tumor cell lines. We studied the role of Igf2 during liver tumorigenesis by creating Igf2 (+/-) M11T-G mice. These mice are essentially null for Igf2 expression because imprinting normally precludes maternal Igf2 expression. M11T-G, Igf2 (+/-) males exhibit a 15-fold reduction in the frequency of large tumors. Igf2 (+/-) tumors do not express maternal Igf2, indicating rigid imprinting control in the liver. LOH/pLOH analysis was performed on the tumors and indicates that acquisition of paternally active Igf2 alleles is a major selective event for M11T-G liver tumorigenesis. This also implies the existence of an imprinted, maternally expressed tumor suppressor gene on chromosome 7 that is unlikely to be H19.
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