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Chromosomal translocation engineering to recapitulate primary events of human cancer

Authors :
Rosalind Codrington
Terence H. Rabbitts
Richard Pannell
N. Chan
T. Tanaka
Alan Forster
Soledad Romero Rodríguez
Florencia Cano
C.-H. Nam
Angelika Daser
N. Lobato
Markus Metzler
Lesley F Drynan
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Mouse models of human cancers are important for understanding determinants of overt disease and for "preclinical" development of rational therapeutic strategies; for instance, based on macrodrugs. Chromosomal translocations underlie many human leukemias, sarcomas, and epithelial tumors. We have developed three technologies based on homologous recombination in mouse ES cells to mimic human chromosome translocations. The first, called the knockin method, allows creation of fusion genes like those typical of translocations of human leukemias and sarcomas. Two new conditional chromosomal translocation mimics have been developed. The first is a method for generating reciprocal chromosomal translocations de novo using Cre-loxP recombination (translocator mice). In some cases, there is incompatible gene orientation and the translocator model cannot be applied. We have developed a different model (invertor mice) for these situations. This method consists of introducing an inverted cDNA cassette into the intron of a target gene and bringing the cassette into the correct transcriptional orientation by Cre-loxP recombination. We describe experiments using the translocator model to generate MLL-mediated neoplasias and the invertor method to generate EWS-ERG-mediated cancer. These methods mimic the situation found in human chromosome translocations and provide the framework for design and study of human chromosomal translocations in mice.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d4addd7ec71998c100c1d2460bde5aac
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/sqb.2005.70.008