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Development of Genetically Flexible Mouse Models of Sarcoma Using RCAS-TVA Mediated Gene Delivery

Sarcomas are a heterogeneous group of mesenchymal malignancies and unfortunately there are limited functional genomics platforms to assess the molecular pathways contributing to sarcomagenesis. Thus, novel model systems are needed to validate which genes should be targeted for therapeutic interventi...

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Autores principales: Kabaroff, Leah, Gupta, Amar, Menezes, Serena, Babichev, Yael, Kandel, Rita C., Swallow, Carol J., Dickson, Brendan C., Gladdy, Rebecca A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3986235/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24733554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094817
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author Kabaroff, Leah
Gupta, Amar
Menezes, Serena
Babichev, Yael
Kandel, Rita C.
Swallow, Carol J.
Dickson, Brendan C.
Gladdy, Rebecca A.
author_facet Kabaroff, Leah
Gupta, Amar
Menezes, Serena
Babichev, Yael
Kandel, Rita C.
Swallow, Carol J.
Dickson, Brendan C.
Gladdy, Rebecca A.
author_sort Kabaroff, Leah
collection PubMed
description Sarcomas are a heterogeneous group of mesenchymal malignancies and unfortunately there are limited functional genomics platforms to assess the molecular pathways contributing to sarcomagenesis. Thus, novel model systems are needed to validate which genes should be targeted for therapeutic intervention. We hypothesized that delivery of oncogenes into mouse skeletal muscle using a retroviral (RCAS-TVA) system would result in sarcomagenesis. We also sought to determine if the cell type transformed (mesenchymal progenitors vs. terminally differentiated tissues) would influence sarcoma biology. Cells transduced with RCAS vectors directing the expression of oncoproteins Kras(G12D), c-Myc and/or Igf2 were injected into the hindlimbs of mice that expressed the retroviral TVA receptor in neural/mesenchymal progenitors, skeletal/cardiac muscle or ubiquitously (N-tva, AKE and BKE strains respectively). Disrupting the G1 checkpoint CDKN2 (p16/p19(−/−)) resulted in sarcoma in 30% of p16/p19(−/−)xN-tva mice with a median latency of 23 weeks (range 8–40 weeks). A similar incidence occurred in p16/p19(−/−)xBKE mice (32%), however, a shorter median latency (10.4 weeks) was observed. p16/p19(−/−)xAKE mice also developed sarcomas (24% incidence; median 9 weeks) yet 31% of mice also developed lung sarcomas. Gene-anchored PCR demonstrated retroviral DNA integration in 86% of N-tva, 93% of BKE and 88% of AKE tumors. Kras(G12D) was the most frequent oncogene isolated. Oncogene delivery by the RCAS-TVA system can generate sarcomas in mice with a defective cell cycle checkpoint. Sarcoma biology differed between the different RCAS models we created, likely due to the cell population being transformed. This genetically flexible system will be a valuable tool for sarcoma research.
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spelling pubmed-39862352014-04-15 Development of Genetically Flexible Mouse Models of Sarcoma Using RCAS-TVA Mediated Gene Delivery Kabaroff, Leah Gupta, Amar Menezes, Serena Babichev, Yael Kandel, Rita C. Swallow, Carol J. Dickson, Brendan C. Gladdy, Rebecca A. PLoS One Research Article Sarcomas are a heterogeneous group of mesenchymal malignancies and unfortunately there are limited functional genomics platforms to assess the molecular pathways contributing to sarcomagenesis. Thus, novel model systems are needed to validate which genes should be targeted for therapeutic intervention. We hypothesized that delivery of oncogenes into mouse skeletal muscle using a retroviral (RCAS-TVA) system would result in sarcomagenesis. We also sought to determine if the cell type transformed (mesenchymal progenitors vs. terminally differentiated tissues) would influence sarcoma biology. Cells transduced with RCAS vectors directing the expression of oncoproteins Kras(G12D), c-Myc and/or Igf2 were injected into the hindlimbs of mice that expressed the retroviral TVA receptor in neural/mesenchymal progenitors, skeletal/cardiac muscle or ubiquitously (N-tva, AKE and BKE strains respectively). Disrupting the G1 checkpoint CDKN2 (p16/p19(−/−)) resulted in sarcoma in 30% of p16/p19(−/−)xN-tva mice with a median latency of 23 weeks (range 8–40 weeks). A similar incidence occurred in p16/p19(−/−)xBKE mice (32%), however, a shorter median latency (10.4 weeks) was observed. p16/p19(−/−)xAKE mice also developed sarcomas (24% incidence; median 9 weeks) yet 31% of mice also developed lung sarcomas. Gene-anchored PCR demonstrated retroviral DNA integration in 86% of N-tva, 93% of BKE and 88% of AKE tumors. Kras(G12D) was the most frequent oncogene isolated. Oncogene delivery by the RCAS-TVA system can generate sarcomas in mice with a defective cell cycle checkpoint. Sarcoma biology differed between the different RCAS models we created, likely due to the cell population being transformed. This genetically flexible system will be a valuable tool for sarcoma research. Public Library of Science 2014-04-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3986235/ /pubmed/24733554 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094817 Text en © 2014 Kabaroff 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
Kabaroff, Leah
Gupta, Amar
Menezes, Serena
Babichev, Yael
Kandel, Rita C.
Swallow, Carol J.
Dickson, Brendan C.
Gladdy, Rebecca A.
Development of Genetically Flexible Mouse Models of Sarcoma Using RCAS-TVA Mediated Gene Delivery
title Development of Genetically Flexible Mouse Models of Sarcoma Using RCAS-TVA Mediated Gene Delivery
title_full Development of Genetically Flexible Mouse Models of Sarcoma Using RCAS-TVA Mediated Gene Delivery
title_fullStr Development of Genetically Flexible Mouse Models of Sarcoma Using RCAS-TVA Mediated Gene Delivery
title_full_unstemmed Development of Genetically Flexible Mouse Models of Sarcoma Using RCAS-TVA Mediated Gene Delivery
title_short Development of Genetically Flexible Mouse Models of Sarcoma Using RCAS-TVA Mediated Gene Delivery
title_sort development of genetically flexible mouse models of sarcoma using rcas-tva mediated gene delivery
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3986235/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24733554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094817
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