CDKN2A/p16 is inactivated in most melanoma cell lines


Autoria(s): Castellano, Marina; Pollock, Pamela M.; Walters, Marilyn K.; Sparrow, Louise E.; Down, Louise M.; Gabrielli, Brian G.; Parsons, Peter G.; Hayward, Nicholas K.
Data(s)

1997

Resumo

The CDKN2A gene maps to chromosome 9p21-22 and is responsible for melanoma susceptibility in some families. Its product, p16, binds specifically to CDK4 and CDK6 in vitro and in vivo, inhibiting their kinase activity. CDKN2A is homozygously deleted or mutated in a large proportion of tumor cell lines and some primary tumors, including melanomas. The aim of this study was to investigate the involvement of CDKN2A and elucidate the mechanisms of p16 inactivation in a panel of 60 cell lines derived from sporadic melanomas. Twenty-six (43%) of the melanoma lines were homozygously deleted for CDKN2A, and an additional 15 (25%) lines carried missense, nonsense, or frameshift mutations. All but one of the latter group were shown by microsatellite analysis to be hemizygous for the region of 9p surrounding CDKN2A. p16 was detected by Western blotting in only five of the cell lines carrying mutations. Immunoprecipitation of p16 in these lines, followed by Western blotting to detect the coprecipitation of CDK4 and CDK6, revealed that p16 was functionally compromised in all cell lines but the one that carried a heterozygous CDKN2A mutation. In the remaining 19 lines that carried wild-type CDKN2A alleles, Western blot analysis and immunoprecipitation indicated that 11 cell lines expressed a wild-type protein. Northern blotting was performed on the remaining eight cell lines and revealed that one cell line carried an aberrantly sized RNA transcript, and two other cell lines failed to express RNA. The promoter was found to be methylated in five cell lines that expressed CDKN2A transcript but not p16. Presumably, the message seen by Northern blotting in these cell lines is the result of cross-hybridization of the total cDNA probe with the exon 1beta transcript. Microsatellite analysis revealed that the majority of these cell lines were hemi/homozygous for the region surrounding CDKN2A, indicating that the wild-type allele had been lost. In the 11 cell lines that expressed functional p16, microsatellite analysis revealed loss of heterozygosity at the markers immediately surrounding CDKN2A in five cases, and the previously characterized R24C mutation of CDK4 was identified in one of the remaining 6 lines. These data indicate that 55 of 60 (92%) melanoma cell lines demonstrated some aberration of CDKN2A or CDK4, thus suggesting that this pathway is a primary genetic target in melanoma development.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/45809/

Publicador

American Association for Cancer Research

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/45809/1/Castellano__Pollock_1997.pdf

http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/57/21/4868

Castellano, Marina, Pollock, Pamela M., Walters, Marilyn K., Sparrow, Louise E., Down, Louise M., Gabrielli, Brian G., Parsons, Peter G., & Hayward, Nicholas K. (1997) CDKN2A/p16 is inactivated in most melanoma cell lines. Cancer Research, 57(21), pp. 4868-4875.

Direitos

Copyright 1997 American Association for Cancer Research

Fonte

Cell & Molecular Biosciences; Faculty of Science and Technology; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #111201 Cancer Cell Biology #Blotting #Western #Chromosomes #Human #Pair 9/ genetics #Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p16/metabolism #Gene Deletion #Genes #p16/ genetics #Humans #Melanoma/ genetics #Neoplasm Proteins/metabolism #Sequence Deletion #Tumor Cells #Cultured
Tipo

Journal Article