1. Induction of tumors in mice by genomic hypomethylation. (Reports)
- Author
-
Gaudet, Francois, Hodgson, J. Graeme, Eden, Amir, Jackson-Grusby, Laurie, Dausman, Jessica, Gray, Joe W., Leonhardt, Heinrich, and Jaenisch, Rudolf
- Subjects
Oncology, Experimental ,Cancer -- Origin -- Research ,DNA damage -- Research -- Observations ,Science and technology ,Origin ,Observations ,Research - Abstract
Genome-wide DNA hypomethylation occurs in many human cancers, but whether this epigenetic change is a cause or consequence of tumorigenesis has been unclear. To explore this phenomenon, we generated mice carrying a hypomorphic DNA methyltransferase 1 (Dnmt1) allele, which reduces Dnmt1 expression to 10% of wild-type levels and results in substantial genome-wide hypomethylation in all tissues. The mutant mice were runted at birth, and at 4 to 8 months of age they developed aggressive T cell lymphomas that displayed a high frequency of chromosome 15 trisomy. These results indicate that DNA hypomethylation plays a causal role in tumor formation, possibly by promoting chromosomal instability., Human cancer cells often display abnormal patterns of DNA methylation. The role of aberrant hypermethylation in the silencing of tumor suppressor genes is now well documented (1). In contrast, the [...]
- Published
- 2003