Inducible transgenics. New lessons on events governing the induction and commitment in mammary tumorigenesis

J. Hulit, D. Di Vizio, R. G. Pestell

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Breast cancer arises from multiple genetic events that together contribute to the established, irreversible malignant phenotype. The development of inducible tissue-specific transgenics has allowed a careful dissection of the events required for induction and subsequent maintenance of tumorigenesis. Mammary gland targeted expression of oncogenic Ras or c-Myc is sufficient for the induction of mammary gland tumorigenesis in the rodent, and when overexpressed together the rate of tumor onset is substantially enhanced. In an exciting recent finding, D'Cruz et al discovered tetracycline-regulated c-Myc overexpression in the mammary gland induced invasive mammary tumors that regressed upon withdrawal of c-Myc expression. Almost one-half of the c-Myc-induced tumors harbored K-ras or N-ras gene point mutations, correlating with tumor persistence on withdrawal of c-Myc transgene expression. These findings suggest maintenance of tumorigenesis may involve a second mutation within the Ras pathway.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)209-212
    Number of pages3
    JournalBreast Cancer Research
    Volume3
    Issue number4
    Publication statusPublished - 2001

    Keywords

    • C-Myc
    • Inducible transgenics
    • Mammary oncogenes
    • Ras

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