A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Promotion of tumorigenesis by heterozygous disruption of the beclin 1 autophagy gene




AuthorsQu XP, Yu J, Bhagat G, Furuya N, Hibshoosh H, Troxel A, Rosen J, Eskelinen EL, Mizushima N, Ohsumi Y, Cattoretti G, Levine B

PublisherAMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC

Publication year2003

JournalJournal of Clinical Investigation

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION

Journal acronymJ CLIN INVEST

Volume112

Issue12

First page 1809

Last page1820

Number of pages12

ISSN0021-9738

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1172/JCI200320039


Abstract
Malignant cells often display defects in autophagy, an evolutionarily conserved pathway for degrading long-lived proteins and cytoplasmic organelles. However, as yet, there is no genetic evidence for a role of autophagy genes in tumor suppression. The beclin 1 autophagy gene is monoallelically deleted in 40-75% of cases of human sporadic breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer. Therefore, we used a targeted mutant mouse model to test the hypothesis that monoallelic deletion of beclin 1 promotes tumorigenesis. Here we show that heterozygous disruption of beclin 1 increases the frequency of spontaneous malignancies and accelerates the development of hepatitis B virus-induced premalignant lesions. Molecular analyses of tumors in beclin 1 heterozygous mice show that the remaining wildtype allele is neither mutated nor silenced. Furthermore, beclin 1 heterozygous disruption results in increased cellular proliferation and reduced autophagy in vivo. These findings demonstrate that beclin 1 is a haplo-insufficient tumor-suppressor gene and provide genetic evidence that autophagy is a novel mechanism of cell-growth control and tumor suppression. Thus, mutation of beclin 1 or other autophagy genes may contribute to the pathogenesis of human cancers.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 17:59