Biallelic Methylation and Silencing of Mouse Aprt in Normal Kidney Cells

JA Rose, PA Yates, J Simpson, JA Tischfield… - Cancer research, 2000 - AACR
JA Rose, PA Yates, J Simpson, JA Tischfield, PJ Stambrook, MS Turker
Cancer research, 2000AACR
Heritable gene silencing is an important mechanism of tumor suppressor gene inactivation
in a variety of human cancers. In the present study, we show that methylation-associated
silencing of the autosomal adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (Aprt) locus occurs in primary
mouse kidney cells. Aprt-deficient cells were isolated from mice that were heterozygous for
Aprt, ie, they contained one wild-type Aprt allele and one targeted allele bearing an insertion
of the bacterial neo gene. Although silencing of the wild-type allele alone was sufficient for …
Abstract
Heritable gene silencing is an important mechanism of tumor suppressor gene inactivation in a variety of human cancers. In the present study,we show that methylation-associated silencing of the autosomal adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (Aprt) locus occurs in primary mouse kidney cells. Aprt-deficient cells were isolated from mice that were heterozygous for Aprt, i.e., they contained one wild-type Aprtallele and one targeted allele bearing an insertion of the bacterial neo gene. Although silencing of the wild-type allele alone was sufficient for the cells to become completely Aprt-deficient, biallelic methylation of the promoter region was found to occur. Moreover, despite the absence of selective pressure against the targeted allele, phenotypic silencing of the inserted neo gene accompanied silencing of the wild-type Aprt allele. A potential role for allelic homology in these events is discussed.
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