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Sei‐Ichi Matsui

Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center

Publishes on Genomics and Chromatin Dynamics, Genomic variations and chromosomal abnormalities, Microtubule and mitosis dynamics. 32 papers and 1.9k citations.

32Publications
1.9kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Genetic Disruption of Cytosine DNA Methyltransferase Enzymes Induces Chromosomal Instability in Human Cancer Cells
Adam R. Karpf, Sei‐Ichi Matsui|Cancer Research|2005
Cited by 273Open Access

DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1)-deficient mice are tumor-prone, and this has been proposed to result from the induction of genomic instability. To address whether loss of DNMT1, or the related protein DNMT3b, results in genomic instability in human cancer cells, we used a near-diploid human colorectal cancer cell line, HCT116, in which one or both DNMT genes were disrupted by homologous recombination. Array-based comparative genomic hybridization analyses indicated that double, but not single, DNMT knock-out cells display two specific alterations in regional DNA copy number, suggesting that DNMT deficiency and genomic DNA hypomethylation are not associated with widespread genomic amplifications or deletions in human cancer cells. However, spectral karyotype analyses revealed that DNMT-deficient HCT116 cells are highly unstable with respect to large-scale chromosomal alterations; furthermore, this effect is characterized by a high degree of individual cell heterogeneity. The induction of chromosomal alterations in DNMT-deficient cells was evidenced both by aneuploidy and by large increases in the number of novel chromosomal translocations. Studies of double knock-out cells indicated that the generation of chromosomal alterations is spontaneous and persistent in vitro, meeting the formal definition of genomic instability. In summary, we show that DNMT deficiency in human cancer cells results in constitutive genomic instability manifested by chromosomal translocations.

A role for p300/CREB binding protein genes in promoting cancer progression in colon cancer cell lines with microsatellite instability
Yurij Ionov, Sei‐Ichi Matsui, John K. Cowell|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2004
Cited by 113Open Access

Our manipulation of the nonsense-mediated decay pathway in microsatellite unstable colon cancer cell lines identified the p300 gene as a potential tumor suppressor in this subtype of cancer. Here, we have demonstrated that not only the p300 gene but also the highly homologous cAMP-response element-binding protein (CREB) binding protein (CBP) gene together are mutated in >85% of microsatellite instability (MSI)+ colon cancer cell lines. A limited survey of primary tumors with MSI+ shows that p300 is also frequently mutated in these cancers, demonstrating that these mutations are not consequences of in vitro growth. The mutations in both genes occur frequently in mononucleotide repeats that generate premature stop codons. Reintroduction of p300 into MSI colon cancer cells could only be supported in the presence of an inactivated CBP gene, suggesting the idea that one or the other function must be inactivated for cancer cell viability. p300 is known to acetylate p53 in response to DNA damage, and when MSI+ cells null for p300 activity are forced to reexpress exogenous p300 cells show slower growth and a flatter morphology. p53 acetylation is increased upon reexpression of p300, suggesting that MSI+ cells constitutively activate the DNA damage response pathway in the absence of DNA-damaging agents. In support of this hypothesis, c-ABL kinase, which is also activated in response to DNA damage, shows higher levels of basal kinase activity in MSI+ cells. These observations suggest that there is a selective growth/survival advantage to mutational inactivation of p300/CBP in cells with inactivated mismatch repair capabilities.