Growth arrest and suppression of tumorigenicity of bladder-carcinoma cell lines induced by the P16/CDKN2 (p16(INK4A), MTS1) gene and other loci on human chromosome 9

被引:0
作者
Wu, Q
Possati, L
Montesi, M
Gualandi, F
Rimessi, P
Morelli, C
Trabanelli, C
BarbantiBrodano, G
机构
[1] UNIV FERRARA,INST MICROBIOL,I-44100 FERRARA,ITALY
[2] UNIV FERRARA,SCH MED,INTERDEPT CTR BIOTECHNOL,I-44100 FERRARA,ITALY
[3] UNIV ANCONA,SCH MED,INST BIOMED SCI,ANCONA,ITALY
关键词
D O I
10.1002/(SICI)1097-0215(19960315)65:6<840::AID-IJC22>3.0.CO;2-6
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Wild-type P16/CDKN2 (p16(INK4A), MTSI) cDNA, directed by the cytomegalovirus (CMV) immediate early promoter, was transfected into RT4 and RT112 bladder-carcinoma cell lines bearing a mutated endogenous P16/CDKN2 gene and lacking endogenous P16/CDKN2 respectively. In both cases, only transfected clones with rearranged exogenous P16/CDKN2 cDNA could be grown and propagated in cell culture. This result is reminiscent of transfection of wild-type p53 into cells with a deleted or mutated endogenous gene and suggests that P16/ CDKN2, over-expressed under control of the strong CMV promoter, induces growth arrest in RT4 and RT112 cells. Transfer of human chromosome 9 to RT4 cells produced RT4/H9 hybrid clones retaining the P16/CDKN2 gene, since in RT4/H9 cell clones P16/CDKN2-gene expression is modulated by the physiological control of chromosomal regulatory sequences. All the RT4/H9 clones lost the entire chromosome 9, except clone 4 and clone 5, which maintained a deleted and an intact chromosome 9 respectively. Loss of several loci in 9p21, including P16/CDKN2, in tumors induced in nude mice by clone 4 and clone 5 suggests that P16/CDKN2 or other genes in 9p21 suppress tumorigenicity in bladder-carcinoma cells. Tumors induced by clone 4 and clone 5 show loss of markers in 9q. The regions 9q22.3, 9q32-33 and 9q34.2, which were maintained in the 2 clones and lost in their derived tumors, may contain tumor-suppressor genes relevant in bladder carcinoma. The results of this study suggest that the P16/CDKN2 gene controls growth of bladder-carcinoma cells when it is over-expressed, and may be involved in the development of bladder carcinoma, but other genes in 9p21 and 9q may participate in bladder-cancer progression. (C) 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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页码:840 / 846
页数:7
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