Pten Dose Dictates Cancer Progression in the Prostate

Lloyd C. Trotman(Kettering University), Masaru Niki(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Zohar Dotan(Kettering University), Jason A. Koutcher(Kettering University), Antonio Di Cristofano(Kettering University), Andrew Xiao, Alan Soo Beng Khoo(Kettering University), Pradip Roy‐Burman(Keck Graduate Institute), Norman M. Greenberg(Baylor College of Medicine), Terry Van Dyke, Carlos Cordon‐Cardo(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Pier Paolo Pandolfi(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)
PLoS Biology
October 27, 2003
Cited by 667Open Access
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Abstract

Complete inactivation of the PTEN tumor suppressor gene is extremely common in advanced cancer, including prostate cancer (CaP). However, one PTEN allele is already lost in the vast majority of CaPs at presentation. To determine the consequence of PTEN dose variations on cancer progression, we have generated by homologous recombination a hypomorphic Pten mouse mutant series with decreasing Pten activity: Pten(hy/+) > Pten(+/-) > Pten(hy/-) (mutants in which we have rescued the embryonic lethality due to complete Pten inactivation) > Pten prostate conditional knockout (Pten(pc)) mutants. In addition, we have generated and comparatively analyzed two distinct Pten(pc) mutants in which Pten is inactivated focally or throughout the entire prostatic epithelium. We find that the extent of Pten inactivation dictate in an exquisite dose-dependent fashion CaP progression, its incidence, latency, and biology. The dose of Pten affects key downstream targets such as Akt, p27(Kip1), mTOR, and FOXO3. Our results provide conclusive genetic support for the notion that PTEN is haploinsufficient in tumor suppression and that its dose is a key determinant in cancer progression.


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