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A single-copy Sleeping Beauty transposon mutagenesis screen identifies new PTEN-cooperating tumor suppressor genes

Authors :
De La Rosa, Jorge
Weber, Julia
Friedrich, Mathias Josef
Li, Yilong
Rad, Lena
Ponstingl, Hannes
Liang, Qi
De Quirós, Sandra Bernaldo
Noorani, Imran
Metzakopian, Emmanouil
Strong, Alexander
Li, Meng Amy
Astudillo, Aurora
Fernández-García, María Teresa
Fernández-García, María Soledad
Hoffman, Gary J
Fuente, Rocío
Vassiliou, George S
Rad, Roland
López-Otín, Carlos
Bradley, Allan
Cadiñanos, Juan
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Abstract

The overwhelming number of genetic alterations identified through cancer genome sequencing requires complementary approaches to interpret their significance and interactions. Here we developed a novel whole-body insertional mutagenesis screen in mice, which was designed for the discovery of Pten-cooperating tumor suppressors. Toward this aim, we coupled mobilization of a single-copy inactivating Sleeping Beauty transposon to Pten disruption within the same genome. The analysis of 278 transposition-induced prostate, breast and skin tumors detected tissue-specific and shared data sets of known and candidate genes involved in cancer. We validated ZBTB20, CELF2, PARD3, AKAP13 and WAC, which were identified by our screens in multiple cancer types, as new tumor suppressor genes in prostate cancer. We demonstrated their synergy with PTEN in preventing invasion in vitro and confirmed their clinical relevance. Further characterization of Wac in vivo showed obligate haploinsufficiency for this gene (which encodes an autophagy-regulating factor) in a Pten-deficient context. Our study identified complex PTEN-cooperating tumor suppressor networks in different cancer types, with potential clinical implications.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bc86347172f10217d6e6930b9f5523c2