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Arsenite malignantly transforms human prostate epithelial cells in vitro by gene amplification of mutated KRAS

Inorganic arsenic is an environmental human carcinogen of several organs including the urinary tract. RWPE-1 cells are immortalized, non-tumorigenic, human prostate epithelia that become malignantly transformed into the CAsE-PE line after continuous in vitro exposure to 5μM arsenite over a period of...

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Autores principales: Merrick, B. Alex, Phadke, Dhiral P., Bostrom, Meredith A., Shah, Ruchir R., Wright, Garron M., Wang, Xinguo, Gordon, Oksana, Pelch, Katherine E., Auerbach, Scott S., Paules, Richard S., DeVito, Michael J., Waalkes, Michael P., Tokar, Erik J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6476498/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31009485
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215504
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author Merrick, B. Alex
Phadke, Dhiral P.
Bostrom, Meredith A.
Shah, Ruchir R.
Wright, Garron M.
Wang, Xinguo
Gordon, Oksana
Pelch, Katherine E.
Auerbach, Scott S.
Paules, Richard S.
DeVito, Michael J.
Waalkes, Michael P.
Tokar, Erik J.
author_facet Merrick, B. Alex
Phadke, Dhiral P.
Bostrom, Meredith A.
Shah, Ruchir R.
Wright, Garron M.
Wang, Xinguo
Gordon, Oksana
Pelch, Katherine E.
Auerbach, Scott S.
Paules, Richard S.
DeVito, Michael J.
Waalkes, Michael P.
Tokar, Erik J.
author_sort Merrick, B. Alex
collection PubMed
description Inorganic arsenic is an environmental human carcinogen of several organs including the urinary tract. RWPE-1 cells are immortalized, non-tumorigenic, human prostate epithelia that become malignantly transformed into the CAsE-PE line after continuous in vitro exposure to 5μM arsenite over a period of months. For insight into in vitro arsenite transformation, we performed RNA-seq for differential gene expression and targeted sequencing of KRAS. We report >7,000 differentially expressed transcripts in CAsE-PE cells compared to RWPE-1 cells at >2-fold change, q<0.05 by RNA-seq. Notably, KRAS expression was highly elevated in CAsE-PE cells, with pathway analysis supporting increased cell proliferation, cell motility, survival and cancer pathways. Targeted DNA sequencing of KRAS revealed a mutant specific allelic imbalance, ‘MASI’, frequently found in primary clinical tumors. We found high expression of a mutated KRAS transcript carrying oncogenic mutations at codons 12 and 59 and many silent mutations, accompanied by lower expression of a wild-type allele. Parallel cultures of RWPE-1 cells retained a wild-type KRAS genotype. Copy number analysis and sequencing showed amplification of the mutant KRAS allele. KRAS is expressed as two splice variants, KRAS4a and KRAS4b, where variant 4b is more prevalent in normal cells compared to greater levels of variant 4a seen in tumor cells. 454 Roche sequencing measured KRAS variants in each cell type. We found KRAS4a as the predominant transcript variant in CAsE-PE cells compared to KRAS4b, the variant expressed primarily in RWPE-1 cells and in normal prostate, early passage, primary epithelial cells. Overall, gene expression data were consistent with KRAS-driven proliferation pathways found in spontaneous tumors and malignantly transformed cell lines. Arsenite is recognized as an important environmental carcinogen, but it is not a direct mutagen. Further investigations into this in vitro transformation model will focus on genomic events that cause arsenite-mediated mutation and overexpression of KRAS in CAsE-PE cells.
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spelling pubmed-64764982019-05-07 Arsenite malignantly transforms human prostate epithelial cells in vitro by gene amplification of mutated KRAS Merrick, B. Alex Phadke, Dhiral P. Bostrom, Meredith A. Shah, Ruchir R. Wright, Garron M. Wang, Xinguo Gordon, Oksana Pelch, Katherine E. Auerbach, Scott S. Paules, Richard S. DeVito, Michael J. Waalkes, Michael P. Tokar, Erik J. PLoS One Research Article Inorganic arsenic is an environmental human carcinogen of several organs including the urinary tract. RWPE-1 cells are immortalized, non-tumorigenic, human prostate epithelia that become malignantly transformed into the CAsE-PE line after continuous in vitro exposure to 5μM arsenite over a period of months. For insight into in vitro arsenite transformation, we performed RNA-seq for differential gene expression and targeted sequencing of KRAS. We report >7,000 differentially expressed transcripts in CAsE-PE cells compared to RWPE-1 cells at >2-fold change, q<0.05 by RNA-seq. Notably, KRAS expression was highly elevated in CAsE-PE cells, with pathway analysis supporting increased cell proliferation, cell motility, survival and cancer pathways. Targeted DNA sequencing of KRAS revealed a mutant specific allelic imbalance, ‘MASI’, frequently found in primary clinical tumors. We found high expression of a mutated KRAS transcript carrying oncogenic mutations at codons 12 and 59 and many silent mutations, accompanied by lower expression of a wild-type allele. Parallel cultures of RWPE-1 cells retained a wild-type KRAS genotype. Copy number analysis and sequencing showed amplification of the mutant KRAS allele. KRAS is expressed as two splice variants, KRAS4a and KRAS4b, where variant 4b is more prevalent in normal cells compared to greater levels of variant 4a seen in tumor cells. 454 Roche sequencing measured KRAS variants in each cell type. We found KRAS4a as the predominant transcript variant in CAsE-PE cells compared to KRAS4b, the variant expressed primarily in RWPE-1 cells and in normal prostate, early passage, primary epithelial cells. Overall, gene expression data were consistent with KRAS-driven proliferation pathways found in spontaneous tumors and malignantly transformed cell lines. Arsenite is recognized as an important environmental carcinogen, but it is not a direct mutagen. Further investigations into this in vitro transformation model will focus on genomic events that cause arsenite-mediated mutation and overexpression of KRAS in CAsE-PE cells. Public Library of Science 2019-04-22 /pmc/articles/PMC6476498/ /pubmed/31009485 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215504 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Merrick, B. Alex
Phadke, Dhiral P.
Bostrom, Meredith A.
Shah, Ruchir R.
Wright, Garron M.
Wang, Xinguo
Gordon, Oksana
Pelch, Katherine E.
Auerbach, Scott S.
Paules, Richard S.
DeVito, Michael J.
Waalkes, Michael P.
Tokar, Erik J.
Arsenite malignantly transforms human prostate epithelial cells in vitro by gene amplification of mutated KRAS
title Arsenite malignantly transforms human prostate epithelial cells in vitro by gene amplification of mutated KRAS
title_full Arsenite malignantly transforms human prostate epithelial cells in vitro by gene amplification of mutated KRAS
title_fullStr Arsenite malignantly transforms human prostate epithelial cells in vitro by gene amplification of mutated KRAS
title_full_unstemmed Arsenite malignantly transforms human prostate epithelial cells in vitro by gene amplification of mutated KRAS
title_short Arsenite malignantly transforms human prostate epithelial cells in vitro by gene amplification of mutated KRAS
title_sort arsenite malignantly transforms human prostate epithelial cells in vitro by gene amplification of mutated kras
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6476498/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31009485
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215504
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