Greenhalgh D A, Wang X J, Roop D R
Department of Dermatology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
J Investig Dermatol Symp Proc. 1996 Apr;1(2):162-76.
Skin cancer is one of the most prevalent forms of human neoplasia with a frequency approaching that of all other neoplasms combined. Given this alarming statistic, which may be further exacerbated by increased ultraviolet B irradiation from ozone depletion, it is vital that realistic, relevant model systems are developed to increase our understanding of the underlying molecular mechanisms of carcinogenesis that result in or evaluate new treatment modalities. Toward this goal, the ability to stably introduce genes into the germline of mice has greatly enhanced prospects for generation of transgenic animal models of multistage molecular carcinogenesis. Moreover, when genes are combined with regulatory sequences that target their expression to specific tissues, investigators are able to study neoplasia both in the context of living organisms and in the tissues suspected of being the targets of these genes. The epidermis is an attractive tissue for targeted gene expression; not only is it a model for epithelial diseases in general, but the accessibility of the epidermis allows easy detection of progressive pathological changes that result from transgene expression and facilitates assessment of the potential role played by environmental factors. We have developed a targeting vector based on the human keratin gene (HK1), which is expressed exclusively in the epidermis of transgenic mice, at a late stage in development and in both basal and differentiated cells. Through the use of this targeting ability, rasHa, fos, and TGF alpha transgenic mice have been developed that exhibit preneoplastic epidermal hyperplasia and hyperkeratosis, and later benign, regression prone papillomas. Together, coexpression of two oncogenes cooperated to give autonomous papillomas, which possessed the phenotypic stability to allow assessment of a third genetic event, namely loss of the p53 tumor suppressor gene, via mating with p53 knockout mice. Loss of p53 expression, however, identified a paradoxical block of papillomatogenesis. This latter result suggests that the epidermis possesses several mechanisms that can effectively compensate for the loss of important tumor suppressor functions and may have evolved to render the skin relatively resistant to the effects of environmental carcinogens.
皮肤癌是人类肿瘤最常见的形式之一,其发病频率接近所有其他肿瘤发病频率的总和。鉴于这一惊人的统计数据,且由于臭氧消耗导致紫外线B辐射增加可能会使情况进一步恶化,因此开发切实可行、相关的模型系统以增进我们对导致癌症发生的潜在分子机制的理解或评估新的治疗方式至关重要。为实现这一目标,将基因稳定导入小鼠种系的能力极大地增强了建立多阶段分子致癌转基因动物模型的前景。此外,当基因与将其表达靶向特定组织的调控序列相结合时,研究人员能够在生物体以及疑似这些基因靶点的组织背景下研究肿瘤形成。表皮是进行靶向基因表达的理想组织;它不仅是一般上皮疾病的模型,而且表皮易于接近,便于检测转基因表达导致的渐进性病理变化,并有助于评估环境因素所起的潜在作用。我们基于人类角蛋白基因(HK1)开发了一种靶向载体,该基因在转基因小鼠的表皮中特异性表达,在发育后期以及基底细胞和分化细胞中均有表达。通过利用这种靶向能力,已培育出rasHa、fos和TGFα转基因小鼠,这些小鼠表现出癌前表皮增生和角化过度,随后出现良性、易于消退的乳头状瘤。两种癌基因的共表达共同导致了自主性乳头状瘤的形成,这些乳头状瘤具有表型稳定性,可通过与p53基因敲除小鼠交配来评估第三个遗传事件,即p53肿瘤抑制基因的缺失。然而,p53表达的缺失却发现了乳头状瘤形成的一个矛盾性阻滞。后一结果表明,表皮具有几种机制,可有效补偿重要肿瘤抑制功能的丧失,并且可能已经进化到使皮肤对环境致癌物的影响具有相对抗性。