A zebrafish <i>bmyb</i> mutation causes genome instability and increased cancer susceptibility

Jennifer L. Shepard(Broad Institute), James F. Amatruda(Broad Institute), Howard M. Stern(Broad Institute), Aravind Subramanian(Broad Institute), David Finkelstein(Broad Institute), James Ziai(Broad Institute), K. Rose Finley(Broad Institute), Kathleen L. Pfaff(Broad Institute), Candace Hersey(Broad Institute), Yi Zhou(Broad Institute), Bruce Barut(Broad Institute), Matthew L. Freedman(Broad Institute), Charles Lee(Broad Institute), Jan M. Spitsbergen(Broad Institute), Donna Neuberg(Broad Institute), Gerhard Weber(Broad Institute), Todd R. Golub(Broad Institute), Jonathan N. Glickman(Broad Institute), Jeffery L. Kutok(Broad Institute), Jon C. Aster(Broad Institute), Leonard I. Zon(Broad Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
September 6, 2005
Cited by 160Open Access
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Abstract

A major goal of cancer research has been to identify genes that contribute to cancer formation. The similar pathology between zebrafish and human tumors, as well as the past success of large-scale genetic screens in uncovering human disease genes, makes zebrafish an ideal system in which to find such new genes. Here, we show that a zebrafish forward genetic screen uncovered multiple cell proliferation mutants including one mutant, crash&burn (crb), that represents a loss-of-function mutation in bmyb, a transcriptional regulator and member of a putative proto-oncogene family. crb mutant embryos have defects in mitotic progression and spindle formation, and exhibit genome instability. Regulation of cyclin B levels by bmyb appears to be the mechanism of mitotic accumulation in crb. Carcinogenesis studies reveal increased cancer susceptibility in adult crb heterozygotes. Gene-expression signatures associated with loss of bmyb in zebrafish are also correlated with conserved signatures in human tumor samples, and down-regulation of the B-myb signature genes is associated with retention of p53 function. Our findings show that zebrafish screens can uncover cancer pathways, and demonstrate that loss of function of bmyb is associated with cancer.


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