Overexpression of the HMGA2 gene in transgenic mice leads to the onset of pituitary adenomas
- 7 May 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oncogene
- Vol. 21 (20) , 3190-3198
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.onc.1205428
Abstract
Overexpression of the HMGA2 gene is a common feature of neoplastic cells both in experimental and human models. Intragenic and extragenic HMGA2 rearrangements responsible for HMGA2 gene overexpression have been frequently detected in human benign tumours of mesenchymal origin. To better understand the role of HMGA2 overexpression in human tumorigenesis, we have generated transgenic mice carrying the HMGA2 gene under the transcriptional control of the cytomegalovirus promoter. High expression of the transgene was demonstrated in all the mouse tissues analysed, whereas no expression of the endogenous HMGA2 gene was detected in the same tissues from wild-type mice. In this study, two indipendent lines of transgenic mice have been generated. By 6 months of age, 85% of female animals of both transgenic lines developed pituitary adenomas secreting prolactin and growth hormone. The transgenic males developed the same phenotype with a lower penetrance (40%) and a longer latency period (about 18 months). Therefore, these data demonstrate that the overexpression of HMGA2 leads to the onset of mixed growth hormone/prolactin cell pituitary adenomas. These transgenic mice may represent an important tool for the study of this kind of neoplasia.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Role of the high mobility group A proteins in human lipomasCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 2001
- Transgenic Mice Expressing a Truncated Form of the High Mobility Group I-C Protein Develop Adiposity and an Abnormally High Prevalence of LipomasJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2000
- Truncated and chimeric HMGI-C genes induce neoplastic transformation of NIH3T3 murine fibroblastsOncogene, 1998
- A fibroadenoma with a t(4;12) (q27;q15) affecting the HMGI-C gene, a member of the high mobility group protein gene familyBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 1996
- An endometrial polyp with a rearrangement of HMGI-C underlying a complex cytogenetic rearrangement involving chromosomes 2 and 12Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics, 1996
- Virus induction of human IFNβ gene expression requires the assembly of an enhanceosomeCell, 1995
- Mutation responsible for the mouse pygmy phenotype in the developmentally regulated factor HMGI-CNature, 1995
- Recurrent rearrangements in the high mobility group protein gene, HMGI-C, in benign mesenchymal tumoursNature Genetics, 1995
- Disruption of the architectural factor HMGI-C: DNA-binding AT hook motifs fused in lipomas to distinct transcriptional regulatory domainsCell, 1995
- Molecular biology: Enhancers, chromosome position effects, and transgenic miceNature, 1983