Accelerated development of polyoma tumors and embryonic lethality: different effects of p53 loss on related mouse backgrounds.

D C Dey, R P Bronson, J Dahl, J P Carroll, T L Benjamin
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Abstract

Molecular evidence linking polyoma virus to p53 inactivation is thus far lacking, setting this highly oncogenic virus apart from other DNA tumor viruses. As a biological test for interaction, we studied the effects of p53 loss on development of virus-induced tumors. The absence of p53 led to more rapid tumor development on two different mouse backgrounds, indicating synergism between p53 loss and oncogenic pathways controlled directly by the virus. No effects of p53 on tumor type or frequency were noted. Polyoma tumor-derived cells in culture retained p53, and most of these showed induction of p21CIP1/WAF1 in response to DNA damage. These results indicate that p53 functions are not directly and fully impaired by the virus in the intact host. On one mouse background, it was discovered that loss of p53 resulted in complete embryonic lethality prior to 11 days of gestation. This lethality could be rescued by inclusion of gene(s) from a 129/SvJ background.

多瘤肿瘤的加速发展和胚胎致死:p53缺失对相关小鼠背景的不同影响。
到目前为止,将多瘤病毒与p53失活联系起来的分子证据尚缺乏,这使得这种高致癌性病毒与其他DNA肿瘤病毒区别开来。作为相互作用的生物学测试,我们研究了p53缺失对病毒诱导肿瘤发展的影响。在两种不同的小鼠背景下,p53缺失导致肿瘤发展更快,这表明p53缺失与病毒直接控制的致癌途径之间存在协同作用。没有发现p53对肿瘤类型或频率的影响。培养的多瘤肿瘤来源的细胞保留了p53,其中大多数细胞在DNA损伤时诱导了p21CIP1/WAF1。这些结果表明,在完整的宿主中,p53的功能没有被病毒直接和完全破坏。在一个小鼠背景中,发现p53缺失导致妊娠11天前胚胎完全死亡。从129/SvJ背景中加入基因可以挽救这种致死率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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