Mouse model and human patient data reveal critical roles for Pten and p53 in suppressing POLE mutant tumor development

Mutations in the exonuclease domain of are associated with tumors harboring very high mutation burdens. The mechanisms linking this significant mutation accumulation and tumor development remain poorly understood. ; mice showed accelerated cancer mortality compared to ; mice. Cells from mice showed...

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Veröffentlicht in:NAR cancer 2022-03, Vol.4 (1), p.zcac004-zcac004
Hauptverfasser: Park, Vivian S, Sun, Meijuan J S, Frey, Wesley D, Williams, Leonard G, Hodel, Karl P, Strauss, Juliet D, Wellens, Sydney J, Jackson, James G, Pursell, Zachary F
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mutations in the exonuclease domain of are associated with tumors harboring very high mutation burdens. The mechanisms linking this significant mutation accumulation and tumor development remain poorly understood. ; mice showed accelerated cancer mortality compared to ; mice. Cells from mice showed increased p53 activation, and subsequent loss of p53 permitted rapid growth, implicating canonical p53 loss of heterozygosity in POLE mutant tumor growth. However, p53 status had no effect on tumor mutation burden or single base substitution signatures in mutant tumors from mice or humans. Pten has important roles in maintaining genome stability. We find that mutations are highly enriched in human POLE mutant tumors, including many in POLE signature contexts. One such signature mutation, , was previously shown in a mouse model to specifically decrease nuclear Pten and lead to increased DNA damage. We found tumors in mice that spontaneously acquired mutations and were associated with significantly reduced nuclear Pten and elevated DNA damage. Re-analysis of human TCGA (The Cancer Genome Atlas) data showed that all mutations occurred in tumors with mutations in . Taken together with recent published work, our results support the idea that development of POLE mutant tumors may involve disabling surveillance of nuclear DNA damage in addition to POLE-mediated hypermutagenesis.
ISSN:2632-8674
2632-8674
DOI:10.1093/narcan/zcac004