Malstrom S, Tili E, Kappes D, Ceci J D, Tsichlis P N
Kimmel Cancer Center, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001 Dec 18;98(26):14967-72. doi: 10.1073/pnas.231467698.
Transgenic mice expressing MyrAkt from a proximal Lck promoter construct develop thymomas at an early age, whereas transgenic mice expressing constitutively active Lck-AktE40K develop primarily tumors of the peripheral lymphoid organs later in life. The thymus of 6- to 8-week-old MyrAkt transgenic mice is normal in size but contains fewer, larger cells than the thymus of nontransgenic control and AktE40K transgenic mice. Earlier studies had shown that cell size and cell cycle are coordinately regulated. On the basis of this finding, and our observations that the oncogenic potential of Akt correlates with its effect on cell size, we hypothesized that mechanisms aimed at maintaining the size of the thymus dissociate cell size and cell cycle regulation by blocking MyrAkt-promoted G(1) progression and that failure of these mechanisms may promote cell proliferation resulting in an enlarged neoplastic thymus. To address this hypothesis, we examined the cell cycle distribution of freshly isolated and cultured thymocytes from transgenic and nontransgenic control mice. The results showed that although neither transgene alters cell cycle distribution in situ, the MyrAkt transgene promotes G(1) progression in culture. Freshly isolated MyrAkt thymocytes express high levels of cyclins D2 and E and cdk4 but lower than normal levels of cyclin D3 and cdk2. Cultured thymocytes from MyrAkt transgenic mice, on the other hand, express high levels of cyclin D3, suggesting that the hypothesized organ size control mechanisms may down-regulate the expression of this molecule. Primary tumor cells, similar to MyrAkt thymocytes in culture, express high levels of cyclin D3. These findings support the hypothesis that tumor induction is caused by the failure of organ size control mechanisms to down-regulate cyclin D3 and to block MyrAkt-promoted G(1) progression.
从近端Lck启动子构建体表达MyrAkt的转基因小鼠在幼年时会发生胸腺瘤,而表达组成型活性Lck-AktE40K的转基因小鼠在生命后期主要发生外周淋巴器官肿瘤。6至8周龄的MyrAkt转基因小鼠的胸腺大小正常,但与非转基因对照小鼠和AktE40K转基因小鼠的胸腺相比,细胞数量更少、体积更大。早期研究表明,细胞大小和细胞周期是协同调节的。基于这一发现,以及我们观察到Akt的致癌潜力与其对细胞大小的影响相关,我们推测旨在维持胸腺大小的机制通过阻断MyrAkt促进的G(1)期进程来解离细胞大小和细胞周期调节,而这些机制的失效可能会促进细胞增殖,导致肿瘤性胸腺增大。为了验证这一假设,我们检查了来自转基因和非转基因对照小鼠的新鲜分离和培养的胸腺细胞的细胞周期分布。结果表明,虽然两种转基因在原位均不改变细胞周期分布,但MyrAkt转基因在培养中促进G(1)期进程。新鲜分离的MyrAkt胸腺细胞表达高水平的细胞周期蛋白D2和E以及cdk4,但细胞周期蛋白D3和cdk2的水平低于正常水平。另一方面,来自MyrAkt转基因小鼠的培养胸腺细胞表达高水平的细胞周期蛋白D3,这表明假设的器官大小控制机制可能下调该分子的表达。原发性肿瘤细胞与培养中的MyrAkt胸腺细胞相似,表达高水平的细胞周期蛋白D3。这些发现支持了以下假设,即肿瘤诱导是由器官大小控制机制未能下调细胞周期蛋白D3并阻断MyrAkt促进的G(1)期进程引起的。