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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Liver-specific expression and high oncogenic efficiency of a c-myc transgene activated by woodchuck hepatitis virus insertion.

The high oncogenic efficiency of woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) has been correlated with the ability of this virus to provoke insertional activation of myc family genes. To assess the impact of viral integration on liver cell transformation, we have generated transgenic mice carrying the mutated c-myc gene and adjacent viral DNA from a woodchuck tumor, in original configuration. Virtually all mice from two different strains developed hepatocellular carcinoma with a mean latency period of 8-12 months. The c-myc transgene was expressed transiently in neonatal livers, and re-expressed at preneoplastic and neoplastic stages in adult livers. Woodchuck c-myc mRNA driven by the normal P1 and P2 promoters and WHV-specific transcripts encoding viral surface antigens were produced in a strictly co-regulated fashion during development and tumorigenesis, indicating a predominant regulatory influence of the viral enhancer. Furthermore, the activity of the viral enhancer in response to various biological stimuli was apparently modulated by glucose uptake and glucagon/insulin balance in differentiated hepatocytes. In this model, a viral integration event selected from a naturally occurring tumor proved to be determinant for induction of hepatocarcinogenesis, although enforced, liver-specific expression of c-myc was limited to a particular developmental stage.[1]

References

  1. Liver-specific expression and high oncogenic efficiency of a c-myc transgene activated by woodchuck hepatitis virus insertion. Etiemble, J., Degott, C., Renard, C.A., Fourel, G., Shamoon, B., Vitvitski-Trépo, L., Hsu, T.Y., Tiollais, P., Babinet, C., Buendia, M.A. Oncogene (1994) [Pubmed]
 
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