England N L, Cuthbert A P, Trott D A, Jezzard S, Nobori T, Carson D A, Newbold R F
Human Cancer Genetics Unit, Brunel University, Uxbridge, UK.
Carcinogenesis. 1996 Aug;17(8):1567-75. doi: 10.1093/carcin/17.8.1567.
Microcell transfer of intact normal human chromosomes into immortal mouse and hamster fibroblast cell lines has revealed growth suppressive activity associated with a small sub-set of the human complement. Here, we describe the results of a detailed study aimed at identifying the gene or genes responsible for the rapid growth-arrest response obtained with human chromosome-9. Initially, STS-PCR deletion mapping of segregants arising in monochromosome transfer experiments was used successfully to localize the active sub-chromosomal region to 9p21. Subsequent fine-structure deletion mapping of previously uniformative hybrid segregants, employing additional markers between D9S162 and D9S171, provided strong evidence that the cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) inhibitor gene CDKN2A (p16INK4A) was solely responsible for the chromosome-9 effect; 9p21 microdeletions in a significant proportion of segregant clones were restricted to a single CDKN2A exon. Transfection experiments with CDKN2A and CDKN2B cDNA expression vectors, using mouse A9 cells and three human malignant melanoma cell lines as recipients, provided further evidence in support of this hypothesis. Collectively, our results indicate that expression of human CDKN2A (controlled either by its natural regulatory elements, or by a cytomegalovirus promoter) is incompatible with in vitro proliferation in immortalized rodent cells and in human melanoma cell lines. The rapidity of the growth inhibitory effects of CDKN2A was inconsistent with a mode of action involving induction of replicative cell senescence via telomerase repression, but was consistent with a mechanism based on cell cycle arrest through cdk inhibition. The study described here has generated a panel of microdeleted monochromosome-9 donor hybrids which may prove valuable in functional investigations aimed at identifying other important tumour suppressor genes located on human chromosome-9.
将完整的正常人染色体微细胞转移到永生小鼠和仓鼠成纤维细胞系中,已揭示出与一小部分人类补体相关的生长抑制活性。在此,我们描述了一项详细研究的结果,该研究旨在鉴定负责由人类9号染色体获得的快速生长停滞反应的一个或多个基因。最初,在单染色体转移实验中产生的分离株的序列标签位点 - 聚合酶链反应(STS-PCR)缺失图谱被成功用于将活性亚染色体区域定位到9p21。随后,对先前无信息的杂交分离株进行精细结构缺失图谱分析,利用D9S162和D9S171之间的额外标记,提供了强有力的证据表明细胞周期蛋白依赖性激酶(cdk)抑制剂基因CDKN2A(p16INK4A)是导致9号染色体效应的唯一原因;相当一部分分离株克隆中的9p21微缺失仅限于单个CDKN2A外显子。使用小鼠A9细胞和三个人类恶性黑色素瘤细胞系作为受体,用CDKN2A和CDKN2B cDNA表达载体进行转染实验,为这一假设提供了进一步的证据。总体而言,我们的结果表明,人类CDKN2A的表达(由其天然调控元件或巨细胞病毒启动子控制)与永生化啮齿动物细胞和人类黑色素瘤细胞系中的体外增殖不相容。CDKN2A生长抑制作用的快速性与通过端粒酶抑制诱导复制性细胞衰老的作用模式不一致,但与基于通过cdk抑制使细胞周期停滞的机制一致。这里描述的研究产生了一组微缺失的单染色体9供体杂种,这可能在旨在鉴定位于人类9号染色体上的其他重要肿瘤抑制基因的功能研究中证明是有价值的。