Morphologic Manifestations of Gene-Specific Molecular Alterations (“Genetic Addictions”) in Mouse Models of Disease

Author:

Couto S. S.1,Bolon B.2,Cardiff R. D.1

Affiliation:

1. University of California–Davis, Center for Comparative Medicine, Davis, CA, USA

2. The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA

Abstract

Neoplasia in both animals and humans results in part from lasting activation of tumor-promoting genes (“oncogenes”) or diminished function of genes responsible for preventing neoplastic induction (“tumor suppressor genes”). The concept of “genetic addiction” has emerged to indicate that neoplastic cells cannot maintain a malignant phenotype without sustained genotypic abnormalities related to aberrant activity of oncogene(s) and/or inactivity of tumor suppressor gene(s). Interestingly, some genetic abnormalities reliably produce distinct morphologic patterns that can be used as structural signatures indicating the presence of a specific molecular alteration. Examples of such consistent genetic/microanatomic pairings have been identified for mutated oncogenes, such as rising mucin-producing capacity with RAS overexpression, and mutated tumor suppressor genes—including PTEN eliciting cell hypertrophy, RB1 dictating neuroendocrine differentiation, and TRP53 encouraging sarcomatous transformation. Familiarity with the concept of genetic addiction, as well as the ability to recognize such regular genomic-phenotypic relationships, are of paramount importance for comparative pathologists who are engaged in phenotyping genetically engineered mice to help unravel genomic intricacies in both health and disease.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary

Cited by 4 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Mammary Gland;Pathology of Genetically Engineered and Other Mutant Mice;2021-12-16

2. Basal-like Breast Cancers: From Pathology to Biology and Back Again;Stem Cell Reports;2018-06

3. Analysis of Mouse Model Pathology: A Primer for Studying the Anatomic Pathology of Genetically Engineered Mice;Cold Spring Harbor Protocols;2014-06

4. Pathogenesis and Molecular Biology of a Transmissible Tumor in the Tasmanian Devil;Annual Review of Animal Biosciences;2014-02-01

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