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Humanized c-Myc Mouse

BACKGROUND: A given tumor is usually dependent on the oncogene that is activated in the respective tumor entity. This phenomenon called oncogene addiction provides the rationale for attempts to target oncogene products in a therapeutic manner, be it by small molecules, by small interfering RNAs (siR...

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Autores principales: Lehmann, Frank M., Feicht, Samantha, Helm, Florian, Maurberger, Anna, Ladinig, Camilla, Zimber-Strobl, Ursula, Kühn, Ralf, Mautner, Josef, Gerbitz, Armin, Bornkamm, Georg W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3409231/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22860051
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042021
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author Lehmann, Frank M.
Feicht, Samantha
Helm, Florian
Maurberger, Anna
Ladinig, Camilla
Zimber-Strobl, Ursula
Kühn, Ralf
Mautner, Josef
Gerbitz, Armin
Bornkamm, Georg W.
author_facet Lehmann, Frank M.
Feicht, Samantha
Helm, Florian
Maurberger, Anna
Ladinig, Camilla
Zimber-Strobl, Ursula
Kühn, Ralf
Mautner, Josef
Gerbitz, Armin
Bornkamm, Georg W.
author_sort Lehmann, Frank M.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A given tumor is usually dependent on the oncogene that is activated in the respective tumor entity. This phenomenon called oncogene addiction provides the rationale for attempts to target oncogene products in a therapeutic manner, be it by small molecules, by small interfering RNAs (siRNA) or by antigen-specific T cells. As the proto-oncogene product is required also for the function of normal cells, this raises the question whether there is a therapeutic window between the adverse effects of specific inhibitors or T cells to normal tissue that may limit their application, and their beneficial tumor-specific therapeutic action. To address this crucial question, suitable mouse strains need to be developed, that enable expression of the human proto-oncogene not only in tumor but also in normal cells. The aim of this work is to provide such a mouse strain for the human proto-oncogene product c-MYC. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We generated C57BL/6-derived embryonic stem cells that are transgenic for a humanized c-Myc gene and established a mouse strain (hc-Myc) that expresses human c-MYC instead of the murine ortholog. These transgenic animals harbor the humanized c-Myc gene integrated into the endogenous murine c-Myc locus. Despite the lack of the endogenous murine c-Myc gene, homozygous mice show a normal phenotype indicating that human c-MYC can replace its murine ortholog. CONCLUSIONS: The newly established hc-Myc mouse strain provides a model system to study in detail the adverse effects of therapies that target the human c-MYC protein. To mimic the clinical situation, hc-Myc mice may be cross-bred to mice that develop tumors due to overexpression of human c-MYC. With these double transgenic mice it will be possible to study simultaneously the therapeutic efficiency and adverse side effects of MYC-specific therapies in the same mouse.
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spelling pubmed-34092312012-08-02 Humanized c-Myc Mouse Lehmann, Frank M. Feicht, Samantha Helm, Florian Maurberger, Anna Ladinig, Camilla Zimber-Strobl, Ursula Kühn, Ralf Mautner, Josef Gerbitz, Armin Bornkamm, Georg W. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: A given tumor is usually dependent on the oncogene that is activated in the respective tumor entity. This phenomenon called oncogene addiction provides the rationale for attempts to target oncogene products in a therapeutic manner, be it by small molecules, by small interfering RNAs (siRNA) or by antigen-specific T cells. As the proto-oncogene product is required also for the function of normal cells, this raises the question whether there is a therapeutic window between the adverse effects of specific inhibitors or T cells to normal tissue that may limit their application, and their beneficial tumor-specific therapeutic action. To address this crucial question, suitable mouse strains need to be developed, that enable expression of the human proto-oncogene not only in tumor but also in normal cells. The aim of this work is to provide such a mouse strain for the human proto-oncogene product c-MYC. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We generated C57BL/6-derived embryonic stem cells that are transgenic for a humanized c-Myc gene and established a mouse strain (hc-Myc) that expresses human c-MYC instead of the murine ortholog. These transgenic animals harbor the humanized c-Myc gene integrated into the endogenous murine c-Myc locus. Despite the lack of the endogenous murine c-Myc gene, homozygous mice show a normal phenotype indicating that human c-MYC can replace its murine ortholog. CONCLUSIONS: The newly established hc-Myc mouse strain provides a model system to study in detail the adverse effects of therapies that target the human c-MYC protein. To mimic the clinical situation, hc-Myc mice may be cross-bred to mice that develop tumors due to overexpression of human c-MYC. With these double transgenic mice it will be possible to study simultaneously the therapeutic efficiency and adverse side effects of MYC-specific therapies in the same mouse. Public Library of Science 2012-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3409231/ /pubmed/22860051 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042021 Text en © 2012 Lehmann et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lehmann, Frank M.
Feicht, Samantha
Helm, Florian
Maurberger, Anna
Ladinig, Camilla
Zimber-Strobl, Ursula
Kühn, Ralf
Mautner, Josef
Gerbitz, Armin
Bornkamm, Georg W.
Humanized c-Myc Mouse
title Humanized c-Myc Mouse
title_full Humanized c-Myc Mouse
title_fullStr Humanized c-Myc Mouse
title_full_unstemmed Humanized c-Myc Mouse
title_short Humanized c-Myc Mouse
title_sort humanized c-myc mouse
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3409231/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22860051
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042021
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