Telomerase reactivation following telomere dysfunction yields murine prostate tumors with bone metastases.

Journal: Cell
Published:
Abstract

To determine the role of telomere dysfunction and telomerase reactivation in generating pro-oncogenic genomic events and in carcinoma progression, an inducible telomerase reverse transcriptase (mTert) allele was crossed onto a prostate cancer-prone mouse model null for Pten and p53 tumor suppressors. Constitutive telomerase deficiency and associated telomere dysfunction constrained cancer progression. In contrast, telomerase reactivation in the setting of telomere dysfunction alleviated intratumoral DNA-damage signaling and generated aggressive cancers with rearranged genomes and new tumor biological properties (bone metastases). Comparative oncogenomic analysis revealed numerous recurrent amplifications and deletions of relevance to human prostate cancer. Murine tumors show enrichment of the TGF-β/SMAD4 network, and genetic validation studies confirmed the cooperative roles of Pten, p53, and Smad4 deficiencies in prostate cancer progression, including skeletal metastases. Thus, telomerase reactivation in tumor cells experiencing telomere dysfunction enables full malignant progression and provides a mechanism for acquisition of cancer-relevant genomic events endowing new tumor biological capabilities.

Authors
Zhihu Ding, Chang-jiun Wu, Mariela Jaskelioff, Elena Ivanova, Maria Kost Alimova, Alexei Protopopov, Gerald Chu, Guocan Wang, Xin Lu, Emma Labrot, Jian Hu, Wei Wang, Yonghong Xiao, Hailei Zhang, Jianhua Zhang, Jingfang Zhang, Boyi Gan, Samuel Perry, Shan Jiang, Liren Li, James Horner, Y Wang, Lynda Chin, Ronald Depinho
Relevant Conditions

Prostate Cancer, Bone Tumor