Spontaneous mutation of cell oncogenes plays a minor role in neoplastic transformation of virus-induced murine T-cell lymphomas.

Tumori

Department of Experimental Oncology 1, Centro di Riferimento Oncologico, Aviano (PN), Italy.

Published: February 1996

Mink cell focus-forming viruses (MCF) are slow-transforming retroviruses that are able to accelerate the appearance of T-cell lymphomas when injected in newborn AKR mice. Activation of proto-oncogenes by proviral insertion is thought to be the major mechanism by which these viruses exert their oncogenic potential. However, molecular phenomena not strictly virus-determined, such as mutations in cellular oncogenes/tumor suppressor genes or chromosome aberrations, have been hypothesized to contribute to the achievement of the fully neoplastic phenotype in MCF-infected mice. To evaluate the role of spontaneous mutagenesis phenomena in murine virus-induced lymphomagenesis, we analyzed a series of 18 MCF247-induced thymic lymphomas and derived cell lines for the presence of p53 and c-ras gene mutations. Only 1 mutation at the p53 gene and 1 mutation at the ki-ras gene were detected in our study. Our results suggest that spontaneous mutagenesis plays a minor role in virus-induced lymphomagenesis and support the notion that multiple proviral insertions could be the prevalent mechanism of transformation in this experimental system.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030089169508100411DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

plays minor
8
minor role
8
t-cell lymphomas
8
spontaneous mutagenesis
8
virus-induced lymphomagenesis
8
spontaneous mutation
4
mutation cell
4
cell oncogenes
4
oncogenes plays
4
role neoplastic
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!