Therapy-induced malignant neoplasms in Nf1 mutant mice.

Journal: Cancer Cell
Published:
Abstract

Therapy-induced cancers are a severe complication of genotoxic therapies. We used heterozygous Nf1 mutant mice as a sensitized genetic background to investigate tumor induction by radiation (RAD) and cyclophosphamide (CY). Mutagen-exposed Nf1(+/-) mice developed secondary cancers that are common in humans, including myeloid malignancies, sarcomas, and breast cancers. RAD cooperated strongly with heterozygous Nf1 inactivation in tumorigenesis. Most of the solid tumors showed loss of the wild-type Nf1 allele but retained two Trp53 alleles. Comparative genomic hybridization demonstrated distinct patterns of copy number aberrations in sarcomas and breast cancers from Nf1 mutant mice, and tumor cell lines showed deregulated Ras signaling. Nf1(+/-) mice provide a tractable model for investigating the pathogenesis of common mutagen-induced cancers and for testing preventive strategies.

Authors
Richard Chao, Urszula Pyzel, Jane Fridlyand, Yien-ming Kuo, Lewis Teel, Jennifer Haaga, Alexander Borowsky, Andrew Horvai, Scott Kogan, Jeannette Bonifas, Bing Huey, Tyler Jacks, Donna Albertson, Kevin Shannon