Follicle Depletion Provides a Permissive Environment for Ovarian Carcinogenesis

We modeled the etiology of postmenopausal biology on ovarian cancer risk using germ cell-deficient white-spotting variant (Wv) mice, incorporating oncogenic mutations. Ovarian cancer incidence is highest in peri- and postmenopausal women, and epidemiological studies have established the impact of re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular and cellular biology 2016-09, Vol.36 (18), p.2418-2430
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Ying, Cai, Kathy Qi, Smith, Elizabeth R., Yeasky, Toni M., Moore, Robert, Ganjei-Azar, Parvin, Klein-Szanto, Andres J., Godwin, Andrew K., Hamilton, Thomas C., Xu, Xiang-Xi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We modeled the etiology of postmenopausal biology on ovarian cancer risk using germ cell-deficient white-spotting variant (Wv) mice, incorporating oncogenic mutations. Ovarian cancer incidence is highest in peri- and postmenopausal women, and epidemiological studies have established the impact of reproductive factors on ovarian cancer risk. Menopause as a result of ovarian follicle depletion is thought to contribute to higher cancer risk. As a consequence of follicle depletion, female Wv mice develop ovarian tubular adenomas, a benign epithelial tumor corresponding to surface epithelial invaginations and papillomatosis frequently found in postmenopausal human ovaries. Lineage tracing using MISR2-Cre indicated that the tubular adenomas that developed in Wv mice were largely derived from the MISR2 lineage, which marked only a fraction of ovarian surface and oviduct epithelial cells in wild-type tissues. Deletion of p27, either heterozygous or homozygous, was able to convert the benign tubular adenomas into more proliferative tumors. Restricted deletion of p53 in Wv/Wv mice by either intrabursal injection of adenoviral Cre or inclusion of the MISR2-Cre transgene also resulted in augmented tumor growth. This finding suggests that follicle depletion provides a permissive ovarian environment for oncogenic transformation of epithelial cells, presenting a mechanism for the increased ovarian cancer risk in postmenopausal women.
ISSN:1098-5549
0270-7306
1098-5549
DOI:10.1128/MCB.00202-16