Defining the ATM-mediated barrier to tumorigenesis in somatic mammary cells following ErbB2 activation Journal Article


Authors: Reddy, J. P.; Peddibhotla, S.; Bu, W.; Zhao, J.; Haricharan, S.; Du, Y. C. N.; Podsypanina, K.; Rosen, J. M.; Donehower, L. A.; Li, Y.
Article Title: Defining the ATM-mediated barrier to tumorigenesis in somatic mammary cells following ErbB2 activation
Abstract: p53, apoptosis, and senescence are frequently activated in preneoplastic lesions and are barriers to progression to malignancy. These barriers have been suggested to result from an ATM-mediated DNA damage response (DDR),whichmay followoncogene-induced hyperproliferation and ensuing DNA replication stress. To elucidate the currently untested role of DDR in breast cancer initiation, we examined the effect of oncogene expression in several murine models of breast cancer. We did not observe a detectable DDR in early hyperplastic lesions arising in transgenic mice expressing several different oncogenes. However, DDR signaling was strongly induced in preneoplastic lesions arising from individual mammary cells transduced in vivo by retroviruses expressing either PyMT or ErbB2. Thus, activation of an oncogene after normal tissue development causes a DDR. Furthermore, in this somatic ErbB2 tumormodel, ATM, and thus DDR, is required for p53 stabilization, apoptosis, and senescence. In palpable tumors in this model, p53 stabilization and apoptosis are lost, but unexpectedly senescence remains in many tumor cells. Thus, this murine model fully recapitulates early DDR signaling; the eventual suppression of its endpoints in tumorigenesis provides compellingevidencethat ErbB2-inducedaberrantmammary cell proliferation leads to anATM-mediated DDR that activates apoptosis and senescence, and at least the former must be overcome to progress to malignancy. This in vivo study also uncovers an unexpected effect of ErbB2 activation previously known for its prosurvival roles, and suggests that protection of the ATM-mediated DDR-p53 signaling pathway may be important in breast cancer prevention.
Keywords: signal transduction; dna-binding proteins; nonhuman; dna replication; cell proliferation; animal cell; mouse; animals; cell cycle proteins; mice; dna damage; somatic cell; apoptosis; gene expression; epidermal growth factor receptor 2; animal experiment; animal model; protein stability; in vivo study; enzyme activation; breast neoplasms; protein p53; carcinogenesis; transgenic mouse; mus musculus; mice, transgenic; cell transformation, neoplastic; oncogene; gene activation; protein-serine-threonine kinases; tumor suppressor proteins; murinae; atm protein; dna damage response; receptor, erbb-2; tumor model; upregulation; senescence; disease models, animal; cell aging; breast cell; p53
Journal Title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume: 107
Issue: 8
ISSN: 0027-8424
Publisher: National Academy of Sciences  
Date Published: 2010-02-23
Start Page: 3728
End Page: 3733
Language: English
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0910665107
PUBMED: 20133707
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2840493
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 4" - "Export Date: 20 April 2011" - "CODEN: PNASA" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Yi-Chieh Du
    6 Du