Identification of a ≦600-kb region on human chromosome 1q42.3 inducing cellular senescence
- 15 January 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oncogene
- Vol. 22 (2) , 281-290
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.onc.1206143
Abstract
The introduction of a human chromosome 1 via microcell-mediated chromosome transfer (MMCT) induces the cellular senescence in mouse melanoma B16-F10 cells. The senescent cells maintained still the telomerase activity, which is frequently associated with immortal growth of human cells, suggesting that a telomerase-independent mechanism is involved in the senescence observed in this mouse cell line. To map the senescence-inducing gene to a specific chromosomal region, we took two experimental approaches: identification of a minimal region with the senescence-inducing activity via MMCT of a series of subchromosomal transferrable fragments (STFs), each consisting of a different profile of human chromosome 1-derived regions, and identification of a region commonly deleted from the transferred chromosome 1 in the revertant clones that escaped cellular senescence. These approaches identified a 2.7–3.0 Mb of senescence-inducing region shared among the active STFs and a 2.4–3.0 Mb of commonly deleted region in the revertant clones. These two regions overlapped each other to map the responsible gene at the 450 to 600-kb interval between UniSTS93710 and D1S3542 on chromosome 1q42.3. This study provides essential information and materials for cloning and characterization of a novel senescence-inducing gene that functions in a telomerase-independent pathway, which is likely to be conserved between mice and humans.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lack of Replicative Senescence in Normal Rodent GliaScience, 2001
- Introduction of Chromosome 7 Suppresses Telomerase with Shortening of Telomeres in a Human Mesothelial Cell LineExperimental Cell Research, 1999
- Cellular Senescence in Telomerase-Expressing Syrian Hamster Embryo CellsExperimental Cell Research, 1998
- Malignant transformation of simian virus 40–immortalized human milk epithelial cells by chemical carcinogenesis accompanied by loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 1 but not microsatellite instabilityMolecular Carcinogenesis, 1998
- Multiple pathways to cellular senescence: Role of telomerase repressorsEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1997
- Isolation and Mapping of 186 New DNA Markers on Human Chromosome 1Genomics, 1995
- Specific Association of Human Telomerase Activity with Immortal Cells and CancerScience, 1994
- Assignment of SV40-Immortalized Cells to More Than One Complementation Group for ImmortalizationExperimental Cell Research, 1993
- Induction of Cellular Senescence in Immortalized Cells by Human Chromosome 1Science, 1990
- Construction of Mouse A9 Clones Containing a Single Human Chromosome Tagged with Neomycin‐resistance Gene via Microcell FusionJapanese Journal of Cancer Research, 1989