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Development of spontaneous mammary tumors in BALB/c p53-heterozygous mice: A model for Li-Fraumeni syndrome
American Journal of Pathology (2000)
  • D. Joseph Jerry, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
  • C.K. Kuperwasser
  • G.D. Hurlbut
  • F.S. Kittrell
  • D. Medina
  • E.S. Dickson
  • S.P. Naber
Abstract

Breast cancer is the most frequent tumor type among women in the United States and in individuals with Li-Fraumeni syndrome. The p53 tumor suppressor gene is altered in a large proportion of both spontaneous breast malignancies and Li-Fraumeni breast cancers. This suggests that loss of p53 can accelerate breast tumorigenesis, yet p53-deficient mice rarely develop mammary tumors. To evaluate the effect of p53 loss on mammary tumor formation, the p53(null) allele was back-crossed onto the BALB/c genetic background. Median survival was 15.4 weeks for BALB/c-p53(-/-) mice compared to 54 weeks for BALB/c-p53(+/-) mice. Sarcomas and lymphomas were the most frequent tumor types in BALB/c-p53(-/-) mice, whereas 55% of the female BALB/c-p53(+/-) mice developed mammary carcinomas. The mammary tumors were highly aneuploid, frequently lost the remaining wild-type p53 allele, but rarely lost BRCA1. Although mammary tumors were rarely detected in BALB/c-p53(-/-) female mice, when glands from BALB/c-p53(-/-) mice were transplanted into wild-type BALB/c hosts, 75% developed mammary tumors. The high rate of mammary tumor development in the BALB/c background, but not C57Bl/6 or 129/Sv, suggests a genetic predisposition toward mammary tumorigenesis. Therefore, the BALB/c-p53(+/-) mice provide a unique model for the study of breast cancer in Li-Fraumeni syndrome. These results demonstrate the critical role that the p53 tumor suppressor gene plays in preventing tumorigenesis in the mammary gland.

Disciplines
Publication Date
December, 2000
Publisher Statement
doi:10.1016/S0002-9440(10)64853-5
Citation Information
D. Joseph Jerry, C.K. Kuperwasser, G.D. Hurlbut, F.S. Kittrell, et al.. "Development of spontaneous mammary tumors in BALB/c p53-heterozygous mice: A model for Li-Fraumeni syndrome" American Journal of Pathology Vol. 157 Iss. 6 (2000)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/djoseph_jerry/9/