MYC is sufficient to generate mid-life high-grade serous ovarian and uterine serous carcinomas in a p53-R270H mouse model.
Alexandra BlackmanAmy C ReesRobert R BowersChristian M JonesSilvia G VaenaMadison A ClarkShelby CarterEvan D VillamorDella EvansAnthony Jacob EmanuelGeorge FullbrightMatthew S O'MalleyRichard L CarpenterDavid T LongLaura S SpruillMartin J RomeoBrian C OrrKristi L HelkeJoe Ryan DelaneyPublished in: Cancer research communications (2024)
Genetically engineered mouse models (GEMM) have fundamentally changed how ovarian cancer etiology, early detection, and treatment is understood. MYC, an oncogene, is amongst the most amplified genes in high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC), but it has not previously been utilized to drive HGSOC GEMMs. We coupled Myc and dominant negative mutant p53-R270H with a fallopian tube epithelium-specific promoter Ovgp1 to generate a new GEMM of HGSOC. Female mice developed lethal cancer at an average of 14.5 months. Histopathological examination of mice revealed HGSOC characteristics including nuclear p53 and nuclear MYC in clusters of cells within the fallopian tube epithelium and ovarian surface epithelium. Unexpectedly, nuclear p53 and MYC clustered cell expression was also identified in the uterine luminal epithelium, possibly from intraepithelial metastasis from the fallopian tube epithelium (FTE). Extracted tumor cells exhibited strong loss of heterozygosity at the p53 locus, leaving the mutant allele. Copy number alterations in these cancer cells were prevalent, disrupting a large fraction of genes. Transcriptome profiles most closely matched human HGSOC and serous endometrial cancer. Taken together, these results demonstrate the Myc and Trp53-R270H transgene was able to recapitulate many phenotypic hallmarks of HGSOC through the utilization of strictly human-mimetic genetic hallmarks of HGSOC. This new mouse model enables further exploration of ovarian cancer pathogenesis, particularly in the 50% of HGSOC which lack homology directed repair mutations. Histological and transcriptomic findings are consistent with the hypothesis that uterine serous cancer may originate from the fallopian tube epithelium.
Keyphrases
- high grade
- mouse model
- low grade
- genome wide
- copy number
- transcription factor
- single cell
- endometrial cancer
- dna methylation
- endothelial cells
- papillary thyroid
- mitochondrial dna
- gene expression
- wild type
- induced apoptosis
- squamous cell
- oxidative stress
- squamous cell carcinoma
- high fat diet induced
- young adults
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- genome wide identification
- cell therapy
- bone marrow
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- insulin resistance
- binding protein