7 results match your criteria: "AURIC-Auburn University Research Initiative in Cancer[Affiliation]"

Frequent genetic defects in the p16/INK4A tumor suppressor in canine cell models of breast cancer and melanoma.

In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim

May 2021

Department of Pathobiology, AURIC-Auburn University Research Initiative in Cancer, College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, 36849, USA.

The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CKIs) belong to a group of key cell cycle proteins that regulate important cancer drug targets such as the cyclin/CDK complexes. Gene defects in the INK4A/B CKI tumor suppressor locus are frequently associated with human cancers and we have previously identified similar defects in canine models. Many of the cancer-associated genetic alterations, known to play roles in mammary tumor development and progression, appear similar in humans and dogs.

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Circulating microRNA as biomarkers of canine mammary carcinoma in dogs.

J Vet Intern Med

May 2020

Department of Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, AURIC-Auburn University Research Initiative in Cancer, Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama, United States.

Background: Differentiating benign from canine malignant mammary tumors requires invasive surgical biopsy. Circulating microRNAs (miRNA) may represent promising minimally invasive cancer biomarkers in people and animals.

Objectives: To evaluate the serum mRNA profile between dogs with and without mammary carcinoma, and to determine if any of these markers have prognostic significance.

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p16 is an important tumor suppressor gene encoded by the INK4A/ARF/INK4B gene locus that is conserved in humans, rodents, and canids. p16 regulates cell cycle in early G1 phase inhibiting transition out of cell cycle from G1/S phase by regulating a multi-protein control complex. p16-associated proteins, cyclin D, CDK4, and CDK6, experience expression level decreases or do not change during cell differentiation and quiescence in contrast to constant p16 expression in post-proliferative cell phases.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers created a mouse model (Ca-PBL-SCID) to study the canine immune system by injecting canine lymphocytes into irradiated NSG mice.
  • The engraftment was analyzed using flow cytometry to track different types of canine lymphocytes like helper T cells, cytotoxic T cells, and B cells, showing that certain cells were present as early as day 1 and varied over time.
  • Despite successful engraftment, about 30% of the mice developed anemia and thrombocytopenia between days 28 and 52, indicating the occurrence of graft versus host disease, similar to findings in human models.
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Spatial/temporal controls of development are regulated by the homeotic (HOX) gene complex and require integration with oncogenes and tumour suppressors regulating cell cycle exit. Spontaneously derived neoplastic canine mammary carcinoma cell models were investigated to determine if HOX expression profiles were associated with neoplasia as HOX genes promote neoplastic potential in human cancers. Comparative assessment of human and canine breast cancer expression profiles revealed remarkable similarity for all four paralogous HOX gene clusters and several unlinked HOX genes.

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p16/INK4A/CDKN2A is an important tumor suppressor gene that arrests cell cycle in G1 phase inhibiting binding of CDK4/6 with cyclin D1, leaving the Rb tumor suppressor protein unphosphorylated and E2F bound and inactive. We hypothesized that p16 has a role in exit from cell cycle that becomes defective in cancer cells. Well characterized p16-defective canine mammary cancer cell lines (CMT28, CMT27, and CMT12), derived stably p16-transfected CMT cell clones (CMT27A, CMT27H, CMT28A, and CMT28F), and normal canine fibroblasts (NCF), were used to investigate expression of p16 after serum starvation into quiescence followed by re-feeding to induce cell cycle re-entry.

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The INK4 family of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CKI) encode important cell cycle regulators that tightly control cell cycle during G1 to S phase. These related genes are considered tumor suppressors as loss of function contributes to the malignant phenotype. Expression of CKIs p16, p14ARF, or p15 were defective in six different canine mammary tumor (CMT) cell lines compared to normal thoracic canine fibroblasts.

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