scholarly journals The level of oncogenic Ras determines the malignant transformation of Lkb1 mutant tissue in vivo

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Briana Rackley ◽  
Chang-Soo Seong ◽  
Evan Kiely ◽  
Rebecca E. Parker ◽  
Manali Rupji ◽  
...  

AbstractThe genetic and metabolic heterogeneity of RAS-driven cancers has confounded therapeutic strategies in the clinic. To address this, rapid and genetically tractable animal models are needed that recapitulate the heterogeneity of RAS-driven cancers in vivo. Here, we generate a Drosophila melanogaster model of Ras/Lkb1 mutant carcinoma. We show that low-level expression of oncogenic Ras (RasLow) promotes the survival of Lkb1 mutant tissue, but results in autonomous cell cycle arrest and non-autonomous overgrowth of wild-type tissue. In contrast, high-level expression of oncogenic Ras (RasHigh) transforms Lkb1 mutant tissue resulting in lethal malignant tumors. Using simultaneous multiview light-sheet microcopy, we have characterized invasion phenotypes of Ras/Lkb1 tumors in living larvae. Our molecular analysis reveals sustained activation of the AMPK pathway in malignant Ras/Lkb1 tumors, and demonstrate the genetic and pharmacologic dependence of these tumors on CaMK-activated Ampk. We further show that LKB1 mutant human lung adenocarcinoma patients with high levels of oncogenic KRAS exhibit worse overall survival and increased AMPK activation. Our results suggest that high levels of oncogenic KRAS is a driving event in the malignant transformation of LKB1 mutant tissue, and uncovers a vulnerability that may be used to target this aggressive genetic subset of RAS-driven tumors.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Briana Rackley ◽  
Chang-Soo Seong ◽  
Evan Kiely ◽  
Rebecca E. Parker ◽  
Manali Rupji ◽  
...  

AbstractThe genetic and metabolic heterogeneity of RAS-driven cancers has confounded therapeutic strategies in the clinic. To address this, rapid and genetically tractable animal models are needed that recapitulate the heterogeneity of RAS-driven cancers in vivo. Here, we generate a Drosophila melanogaster model of Ras/Lkb1mutant carcinoma. We show that low-level expression of oncogenic Ras (RasLo) promotes the survival of Lkb1 mutant tissue, but results in autonomous cell cycle arrest and non-autonomous overgrowth of wild-type tissue. In contrast, high-level expression of oncogenic Ras (RasHi) transforms Lkb1 mutant tissue resulting in lethal malignant tumors. Using simultaneous multiview light-sheet microcopy, we have characterized invasion phenotypes of Ras/Lkb1 tumors in living larvae. Our molecular analysis reveals sustained activation of the AMPK pathway in malignant Ras/Lkb1 tumors, and demonstrate the genetic and pharmacologic dependence of these tumors on CaMK-activated Ampk. We further show that LKB1 mutant human lung adenocarcinoma patients with high levels of oncogenic KRAS exhibit worse overall survival and increased AMPK activation. Our results suggest that high levels of oncogenic KRAS is a driving event in the malignant transformation of LKB1 mutant tissue, and uncover a novel vulnerability that may be used to target this aggressive genetic subset of RAS-driven tumors.One Sentence SummaryA multivariable Ras-driven Drosophila model reveals a novel LKB1 mutant lung adenocarcinoma patient subpopulation and targetable effector pathway.


1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 7455-7465 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Lycan ◽  
G Mikesell ◽  
M Bunger ◽  
L Breeden

Swi4 and Swi6 form a complex which is required for Start-dependent activation of HO and for high-level expression of G1 cyclin genes CLN1 and CLN2. To identify other regulators of this pathway, we screened for dominant, recessive, conditional, and allele-specific suppressors of swi4 mutants. We isolated 16 recessive suppressors that define three genes, SSF1, SSF5, and SSF9 (suppressor of swi four). Mutations in all three genes bypass the requirement for both Swi4 and Swi6 for HO transcription and activate transcription from reporter genes lacking upstream activating sequences (UASs). SSF5 is allelic with SIN4 (TSF3), a gene implicated in global repression of transcription and chromatin structure, and SSF9 is likely to be a new global repressor of transcription. SSF1 is allelic with CDC68 (SPT16). cdc68 mutations have been shown to increase expression from defective promoters, while preventing transcription from other intact promoters, including CLN1 and CLN2. We find that CDC68 is a required activator of both SWI4 and SWI6, suggesting that CDC68's role at the CLN promoters may be indirect. The target of CDC68 within the SWI4 promoter is complex in that known activating elements (MluI cell cycle boxes) in the SWI4 promoter are required for CDC68 dependence but only within the context of the full-length promoter. This result suggests that there may be both a chromatin structure and a UAS-specific component to Cdc68 function at SWI4. We suggest that Cdc68 functions both in the assembly of repressive complexes that form on many intact promoters in vivo and in the relief of this repression during gene activation.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 113 (11) ◽  
pp. 2375-2385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joerg Faber ◽  
Andrei V. Krivtsov ◽  
Matthew C. Stubbs ◽  
Renee Wright ◽  
Tina N. Davis ◽  
...  

Leukemias that harbor translocations involving the mixed lineage leukemia gene (MLL) possess unique biologic characteristics and often have an unfavorable prognosis. Gene expression analyses demonstrate a distinct profile for MLL-rearranged leukemias with consistent high-level expression of select Homeobox genes, including HOXA9. Here, we investigated the effects of HOXA9 suppression in MLL-rearranged and MLL-germline leukemias using RNA interference. Gene expression profiling after HOXA9 suppression demonstrated co–down-regulation of a program highly expressed in human MLL-AML and murine MLL-leukemia stem cells, including HOXA10, MEIS1, PBX3, and MEF2C. We demonstrate that HOXA9 depletion in 17 human AML/ALL cell lines (7 MLL-rearranged, 10 MLL-germline) induces proliferation arrest and apoptosis specifically in MLL-rearranged cells (P = .007). Similarly, assessment of primary AMLs demonstrated that HOXA9 suppression induces apoptosis to a greater extent in MLL-rearranged samples (P = .01). Moreover, mice transplanted with HOXA9-depleted t(4;11) SEMK2 cells revealed a significantly lower leukemia burden, thus identifying a role for HOXA9 in leukemia survival in vivo. Our data indicate an important role for HOXA9 in human MLL-rearranged leukemias and suggest that targeting HOXA9 or downstream programs may be a novel therapeutic option.


1996 ◽  
Vol 319 (2) ◽  
pp. 441-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vijay BHANDARI ◽  
Rachael DANIEL ◽  
Pheng Siew LIM ◽  
Andrew BATEMAN

Granulins (grns) or epithelins (epis) are peptides with molecular masses of approx. 6 kDa that modulate the growth of cells. The precursor for the grns/epis, which might itself be biologically active, is a secreted glycoprotein containing multiple repeats of the grn/epi motif. Grn/epi mRNA occurs widely in vivo, particularly in tissues rich in epithelial and haematopoietic cells. To understand better the role of the gene products for grn/epi it is important to determine the patterns of grn/epi gene expression and how this is regulated. To assist in this we have obtained the 5´ sequence of the human grn/epi gene, and using chimaeras of the grn/epi -5´ sequence and the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene we have shown a strong promoter activity associated with the 5´ sequence of the human grn/epi gene. We have further delineated regions of the 5´ sequence that confer high-level expression on the chimaeric gene.


1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 1823-1831 ◽  
Author(s):  
P M Mathisen ◽  
L Miller

We have used in vitro explant cultures of Xenopus laevis skin to investigate the role that the thyroid hormone triiodothyronine (T3) plays in activating the 63-kilodalton (kDa) keratin genes. The activation of these genes in vivo requires two distinct steps, one independent of T3 and one dependent on T3. In this report we have shown that the same two steps are required to fully activate the 63-kDa keratin genes in skin explant cultures, and we have characterized the T3-mediated step in greater detail. Unlike the induction of transcription by T3 or steroid hormones in adult tissues, there was a long latent period of approximately 2 days between the addition of T3 to skin cultures and an increase in concentration of keratin mRNA. While the T3 induction of 63-kDa keratin gene transcription cannot occur until age 48, a short transient exposure of stage 40 skin cultures to T3 resulted in high-level expression of these genes 5 days later, when normal siblings had reached stage 48. This result indicates that T3 induces a stable change in epidermal cells which can be expressed much later, after extensive cell proliferation has occurred in the absence of T3. Once the 63-kDa keratin genes were induced, they were stably expressed, and by the end of metamorphosis T3 had no further effect on their expression. The results suggest that T3 induces constitutive expression of the 63-kDa keratin genes during metamorphosis.


1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 7455-7465 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Lycan ◽  
G Mikesell ◽  
M Bunger ◽  
L Breeden

Swi4 and Swi6 form a complex which is required for Start-dependent activation of HO and for high-level expression of G1 cyclin genes CLN1 and CLN2. To identify other regulators of this pathway, we screened for dominant, recessive, conditional, and allele-specific suppressors of swi4 mutants. We isolated 16 recessive suppressors that define three genes, SSF1, SSF5, and SSF9 (suppressor of swi four). Mutations in all three genes bypass the requirement for both Swi4 and Swi6 for HO transcription and activate transcription from reporter genes lacking upstream activating sequences (UASs). SSF5 is allelic with SIN4 (TSF3), a gene implicated in global repression of transcription and chromatin structure, and SSF9 is likely to be a new global repressor of transcription. SSF1 is allelic with CDC68 (SPT16). cdc68 mutations have been shown to increase expression from defective promoters, while preventing transcription from other intact promoters, including CLN1 and CLN2. We find that CDC68 is a required activator of both SWI4 and SWI6, suggesting that CDC68's role at the CLN promoters may be indirect. The target of CDC68 within the SWI4 promoter is complex in that known activating elements (MluI cell cycle boxes) in the SWI4 promoter are required for CDC68 dependence but only within the context of the full-length promoter. This result suggests that there may be both a chromatin structure and a UAS-specific component to Cdc68 function at SWI4. We suggest that Cdc68 functions both in the assembly of repressive complexes that form on many intact promoters in vivo and in the relief of this repression during gene activation.


Author(s):  
Irene Fernández-Duran ◽  
Andrea Quintanilla ◽  
Núria Tarrats ◽  
Jodie Birch ◽  
Priya Hari ◽  
...  

AbstractCytoplasmic recognition of microbial lipopolysaccharides (LPS) in human cells is elicited by the caspase-4 and caspase-5 noncanonical inflammasomes, which induce a form of inflammatory cell death termed pyroptosis. Here we show that LPS-mediated activation of caspase-4 also induces a stress response promoting cellular senescence, which is dependent on the caspase-4 substrate gasdermin-D and the tumor suppressor p53. Furthermore, we found that the caspase-4 noncanonical inflammasome is induced and assembled in response to oncogenic RAS signaling during oncogene-induced senescence (OIS). Moreover, targeting caspase-4 expression in OIS showed its critical role in the senescence-associated secretory phenotype and the cell cycle arrest induced in cellular senescence. Finally, we observed that caspase-4 induction occurs in vivo in mouse models of tumor suppression and ageing. Altogether, we are showing that cellular senescence is induced by cytoplasmic LPS recognition by the noncanonical inflammasome and that this pathway is conserved in the cellular response to oncogenic stress.


1999 ◽  
Vol 82 (08) ◽  
pp. 562-571 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Josephs ◽  
Jiemin Zhou ◽  
Xiangming Fang ◽  
Ramón Alemany ◽  
Cristina Balagué ◽  
...  

IntroductionHemophilia A and B are the most common bleeding disorders caused by deficiencies of clotting factors VIII and IX, respectively, both of which are X-linked with a recessive heredity.1 Replacement of the deficient factors with frequent intravenous injections of plasma concentrates or recombinant proteins is the standard treatment for these diseases.2 Great efforts have been made for nearly a decade toward developing experimental gene therapy for these diseases and aiming at the development of a medical intervention that is more effective and convenient than the currently available replacement therapies.3 Hemophilia is a suitable clinical model for the development of gene therapy products and has a number of advantages: 1) there is a simple and well defined cause-and-effect relationship between the protein deficiencies and bleeding symptoms; 2) tissue-specific expression and precise regulation of the transgenes are not necessary; 3) well characterized animal models are available for preclinical studies; 4) an unequivocal endpoint for product efficacy can be assessed in clinical trials; and 5) even 1% to 5% of the normal physiological levels of the proteins is therapeutic.For gene therapy of hemophilia, the most challenging hurdle, with respect to the long-term expression of the deficient proteins at adequate levels, is the development of a suitable gene delivery system. Technologies have been evolving from ex vivo to in vivo approaches, from initial use of retroviral vector to recent application of adenviral (Ad) or adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector, demonstrating progress from early results of transient low-level expression to more sustained high-level expression.3 For hemophilia A treatment, Ad vectors are particularly useful, since the liver naturally produces factor VIII, and following intravenous (i.v.) injection, Ad vectors concentrate in the liver. This makes the gene transduction efficiency to liver very high. Adenovirus vectors have been developed for gene therapy due to their high titer, broad infectivity, potential for large payload, and in vivo gene delivery capacity.4 Although the immunogenicity and cytotoxicity associated with the early-generation Ad vectors have been a concern with respect to their clinical application, newly developed vectors, in which the viral coding sequences have been deleted, have significantly reduced the side effects associated with the vectors. The “gutless” Ad vector, or so called helper-dependent, large-capacity, or mini- Ad vectors are the representative examples of these new-generation Ad vectors.5-15 The mini-Ad vector system described in this report was developed based on two major research findings. First, an Ad- SV40 hybrid virus discovered during attempts to grow human Ad in non-permissive monkey COS-7 cells.16 The hybrid virus had a genome structure in which only both ends of the Ad sequences were retained and almost all coding sequences of the Ad genome were replaced by symmetric, tandemly repeated SV40 genomes. The hybrid viruses replicated and were packaged in the presence of a wild-type Ad as a helper. This finding implied that total replacement of the Ad genome was possible to form a mini-Ad vector as long as proper helper function and selective pressure was provided. Secondly, it was discovered that Ad packaging can be attenuated by deleting portions of the packaging signal.17 This finding provided a means to put selective pressure on the helper Ad (referred to as ancillary Ad) by specifically limiting its packaging process and allowing a preferential packaging of the mini-Ad. The system, therefore, is designed to have three main components: the mini-Ad vector, the E1-deleted ancillary Ad, and a production cell line that provides AdE1 complementation.Based on the mini-Ad vector system, MiniAdFVIII was developed. The MiniAdFVIII vector carries a 27 kb expression cassette, in which the full-length human factor VIII cDNA is flanked by a human albumin promoter and cognate genomic sequences. Infection of MiniAdFVIII in vitro showed that the vector mediated expression of functional human factor VIII at levels of 100-200 ng/106 cells per 24 hours in HepG2 and 293 cells. With single-dose intravenous injection of 1011 viral particles in hemophilic mice, MiniAdFVIII produced a sustained high-level expression of human factor VIII (at 100-800 ng/ml for up to 369 days) that corrected the factor VIII-deficient phenotype. Safety studies of MiniAdFVIII showed that there were no significant toxicities in mice and dogs after a single intravenous dose of up to 3×1011 and 6×1012 viral particles, respectively. In this report, other studies for developing the MiniAdFVIII vector with a site-specific integration capability and the development of a human factor VIII-tolerized mouse model for preclinical studies of MiniAdFVIII are described.


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