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    Date Issued2007 (1)2005 (1)1999 (1)Author
    DePinho, Ronald A. (3)
    Chin, Lynda (2)Asher, Damon R. (1)Bronson, Roderick T. (1)Cerny, Anna M. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Cell Biology (1)Department of Medicine (1)Department of Microbiology and Immunology (1)Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology (1)Department of Pediatric Oncology (1)View MoreDocument TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordLife Sciences (2)Medicine and Health Sciences (2)Alu Elements; Base Sequence; *Gene Duplication; Humans; In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence; Leukemia-Lymphoma, Adult T-Cell; Models, Biological; Models, Genetic; Molecular Sequence Data; Nucleic Acid Hybridization; Polymerase Chain Reaction; Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myb; Recombination, Genetic (1)Animals (1)Animals; Antigens, Polyomavirus Transforming; Cell Division; Cell Line, Transformed; Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p16; Mice; Mice, SCID; Neoplasms; Phenotype; Telomerase; Telomere (1)View MoreJournalCell (1)Genesis (New York, N.Y. : 2000) (1)The Journal of experimental medicine (1)

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    Alu elements mediate MYB gene tandem duplication in human T-ALL

    O'Neil, Jennifer Elinor; Tchinda, Joelle; Gutierrez, Alejandro; Moreau, Lisa A.; Maser, Richard S.; Wong, Kwok-Kin; Li, Wei; McKenna, Keith; Liu, X. Shirley; Feng, Bin; et al. (2007-12-12)
    Recent studies have demonstrated that the MYB oncogene is frequently duplicated in human T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). We find that the human MYB locus is flanked by 257-bp Alu repeats and that the duplication is mediated somatically by homologous recombination between the flanking Alu elements on sister chromatids. Nested long-range PCR analysis indicated a low frequency of homologous recombination leading to MYB tandem duplication in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells of approximately 50% of healthy individuals, none of whom had a MYB duplication in the germline. We conclude that Alu-mediated MYB tandem duplication occurs at low frequency during normal thymocyte development and is clonally selected during the molecular pathogenesis of human T-ALL.
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    Coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor is essential for cardiomyocyte development

    Asher, Damon R.; Cerny, Anna M.; Weiler, Sarah R.; Horner, James W.; Keeler, Marilyn L.; Neptune, Mychell A.; Jones, Stephen N.; Bronson, Roderick T.; DePinho, Ronald A.; Finberg, Robert W. (2005-05-03)
    The coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (CAR) is a transmembrane protein that is known to be a site of viral attachment and entry, but its physiologic functions are undefined. CAR expression is maximal in neonates and wanes rapidly after birth in organs such as heart, muscle, and brain, suggesting that CAR plays a role in the development of these tissues. Here, we show that CAR deficiency resulted in an embryonic lethal condition associated with cardiac defects. Specifically, commencing approximately 10.5 days postconception (dpc), CAR-/- cardiomyocytes exhibited regional apoptosis evidenced by both histopathologic features of cell death and positive staining for the apoptotic marker cleaved caspase 3. CAR-/- fetuses invariably suffered from degeneration of the myocardial wall and thoracic hemorrhaging, leading to death by 11.5 dpc. These findings are consistent with the view that CAR provides positive survival signals to cardiomyocytes that are essential for normal heart development.
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    Short dysfunctional telomeres impair tumorigenesis in the INK4a(delta2/3) cancer-prone mouse

    Greenberg, Roger A.; Chin, Lynda; Femino, Andrea M.; Lee, Kee-Ho; Gottlieb, Geoffrey J.; Singer, Robert H.; Greider, Carol W.; DePinho, Ronald A. (1999-05-25)
    Maintenance of telomere length is predicted to be essential for bypass of senescence and crisis checkpoints in cancer cells. The impact of telomere dysfunction on tumorigenesis was assessed in successive generations of mice doubly null for the telomerase RNA (mTR) and the INK4a tumor suppressor genes. Significant reductions in tumor formation in vivo and oncogenic potential in vitro were observed in late generations of telomerase deficiency, coincident with severe telomere shortening and associated dysfunction. Reintroduction of mTR into cells significantly restored the oncogenic potential, indicating telomerase activation is a cooperating event in the malignant transformation of cells containing critically short telomeres. The results described here demonstrate that loss of telomere function in a cancer-prone mouse model possessing intact DNA damage responses impairs, but does not prevent, tumor formation.
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