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  • Article: Intrathecal tripeptidyl-peptidase 1 reduces lysosomal storage in a canine model of late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis.
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    ABSTRACT: Late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (LINCL) is caused by mutations in the gene encoding tripeptidyl-peptidase 1 (TPP1). LINCL patients accumulate lysosomal storage materials in the CNS accompanied by neurodegeneration, blindness, and functional decline. Dachshunds homozygous for a null mutation in the TPP1 gene recapitulate many symptoms of the human disease. The objectives of this study were to determine whether intrathecal (IT) TPP1 treatment attenuates storage accumulation and functional decline in TPP1-/- Dachshunds and to characterize the CNS distribution of TPP1 activity. TPP1 was administered to one TPP1-/- and one homozygous wild-type (WT) dog. An additional TPP1-/- and WT dog received vehicle. Four IT administrations of 32 mg TPP1 formulated in 2.3 mL of artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF) or vehicle were administered monthly via the cerebellomedullary cistern from four to seven months of age. Functional decline was assessed by physical and neurological examinations, electrophysiology, and T-maze performance. Neural tissues were collected 48 h after the fourth administration and analyzed for TPP1 activity and autofluorescent storage material. TPP1 was distributed at greater than WT levels in many areas of the CNS of the TPP1-/- dog administered TPP1. The amount of autofluorescent storage was decreased in this dog relative to the vehicle-treated affected control. No improvement in overall function was observed in this dog compared to the vehicle-treated TPP1-/- littermate control. These results demonstrate for the first time in a large animal model of LINCL widespread delivery of biochemically active TPP1 to the brain after IT administration along with a decrease in lysosomal storage material. Further studies with this model will be necessary to optimize the dosing route and regimen to attenuate functional decline.
    Molecular Genetics and Metabolism 06/2011; 104(3):325-37. · 3.19 Impact Factor
  • Article: Gene promoter hypermethylation in mouse lung tumors.
    Brian R Vuillemenot, Julie A Hutt, Steven A Belinsky
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    ABSTRACT: The mouse is a good model for evaluating the efficacy of chemopreventive agents for lung cancer. Gene silencing by promoter hypermethylation is a critical component for the development and progression of lung cancer and an emerging target for preventive intervention by demethylating agents. Genes methylated in mouse lung tumors could serve as biomarkers to evaluate the effectiveness of demethylating agents for preventing lung cancer and causing gene reexpression in vivo. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate a panel of genes inactivated by promoter hypermethylation in human lung cancer for silencing by this epigenetic mechanism in murine lung tumors induced by 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), cigarette smoke, or arising spontaneously. Cadherin-13, estrogen receptor-alpha, progesterone receptor, and runt-related transcription factor-3 were frequently methylated in mouse lung tumor-derived cell lines, whereas cadherin-1 and suppressor of cytokine signaling-1 were not. Methylation within these four genes was associated with lack of expression that could be restored after treatment with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine and with methylation within the CpG island of each gene. Methylation-specific PCR revealed that methylation of these four genes occurred at prevalences of 24% to 69% in primary lung tumors arising spontaneously or induced by exposure to cigarette smoke or NNK. Estrogen receptor-alpha methylation was more frequent in spontaneously occurring lung cancer than cigarette smoke-induced or NNK-induced lung cancer, whereas runt-related transcription factor-3 showed the opposite relationship. Thus, genes can be targeted for inactivation by methylation, depending on exposure history. This study indicates that methylation events frequently observed in human lung cancer are recapitulated in the mouse model and identifies four potential biomarkers for assessing intervention approaches for reversing epigenetically mediated gene silencing.
    Molecular Cancer Research 05/2006; 4(4):267-73. · 4.29 Impact Factor
  • Article: Life-span inhalation exposure to mainstream cigarette smoke induces lung cancer in B6C3F1 mice through genetic and epigenetic pathways.
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    ABSTRACT: Although cigarette smoke has been epidemiologically associated with lung cancer in humans for many years, animal models of cigarette smoke-induced lung cancer have been lacking. This study demonstrated that life time whole body exposures of female B6C3F1 mice to mainstream cigarette smoke at 250 mg total particulate matter/m(3) for 6 h per day, 5 days a week induces marked increases in the incidence of focal alveolar hyperplasias, pulmonary adenomas, papillomas and adenocarcinomas. Cigarette smoke-exposed mice (n = 330) had a 10-fold increase in the incidence of hyperplastic lesions, and a 4.6-fold (adenomas and papillomas), 7.25-fold (adenocarcinomas) and 5-fold (metastatic pulmonary adenocarcinomas) increase in primary lung neoplasms compared with sham-exposed mice (n = 326). Activating point mutations in codon 12 of the K-ras gene were identified at a similar rate in tumors from sham-exposed mice (47%) and cigarette smoke-exposed mice (60%). The percentages of transversion and transition mutations were similar in both the groups. Hypermethylation of the death associated protein (DAP)-kinase and retinoic acid receptor (RAR)-beta gene promoters was detected in tumors from both sham- and cigarette smoke-exposed mice, with a tendency towards increased frequency of RAR-beta methylation in the tumors from the cigarette smoke-exposed mice. These results emphasize the importance of the activation of K-ras and silencing of DAP-kinase and RAR-beta in lung cancer development, and confirm the relevance of this mouse model for studying lung tumorigenesis.
    Carcinogenesis 12/2005; 26(11):1999-2009. · 5.70 Impact Factor
  • Article: Aberrant promoter hypermethylation of the death-associated protein kinase gene is early and frequent in murine lung tumors induced by cigarette smoke and tobacco carcinogens.
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    ABSTRACT: Loss of expression of the death-associated protein (DAP)-kinase gene by aberrant promoter methylation may play an important role in cancer development and progression. The purpose of this investigation was to determine the commonality for inactivation of the DAP-kinase gene in adenocarcinomas induced in mice by chronic exposure to mainstream cigarette smoke, the tobacco carcinogens 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK) and vinyl carbamate, and the occupational carcinogen methylene chloride. The timing for inactivation was also determined in alveolar hyperplasias that arise in lung cancer induced in the A/J mouse by NNK. The DAP-kinase gene was not expressed in three of five NNK-induced lung tumor-derived cell lines or in a spontaneously arising lung tumor-derived cell line. Treatment with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine restored expression; dense methylation throughout the DAP-kinase CpG island detected by bisulfite sequencing supported methylation as the inactivating event in these cell lines. Methylation-specific PCR detected inactivation of the DAP-kinase gene in 43% of tumors associated with cigarette smoke, a frequency similar to those reported in human non-small cell lung cancer. In addition, DAP-kinase methylation was detected in 52%, 60%, and 50% of tumors associated with NNK, vinyl carbamate, and methylene chloride, respectively. Methylation was observed at similar prevalence in both NNK-induced hyperplasias and adenocarcinomas (46% versus 52%), suggesting that inactivation of this gene is one pathway for tumor development in the mouse lung. Bisulfite sequencing of both premalignant and malignant lesions revealed dense methylation, substantiating that this gene is functionally inactivated at the earliest histological stages of adenocarcinoma development. This study is the first to use a murine model of cigarette smoke-induced lung cancer and demonstrate commonality for inactivation by promoter hypermethylation of a gene implicated in the development of this disease in humans.
    Cancer Research 07/2004; 64(11):3844-8. · 7.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Carcinogen exposure differentially modulates RAR-beta promoter hypermethylation, an early and frequent event in mouse lung carcinogenesis.
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    ABSTRACT: The retinoic acid receptor beta (RAR-beta) gene encodes one of the primary receptors for retinoic acid, an important signaling molecule in lung growth, differentiation and carcinogenesis. RAR-beta has been shown to be down-regulated by methylation in human lung cancer. We have used previously lung tumors induced in mice to evaluate the timing and effect of specific carcinogen exposures on targeting genes altered in human lung cancer. These studies were extended to characterize the role of methylation of the RAR-beta gene in murine lung cancers. After treatment with the demethylating agent 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (DAC), RAR-beta was re-expressed in silenced cell lines or expressed at a higher rate than without DAC, supporting methylation as the inactivating mechanism. Bisulfite sequencing detected dense methylation in the area of the CpG island that contained the 5' untranslated region and the first translated exon in non-expressing cell lines, compared with minimal and heterogeneous methylation in normal mouse lung. Methylation-specific PCR revealed that this gene is targeted differentially by carcinogen exposures with the detection of methylated alleles in virtually all primary tumors associated with cigarette smoke or 4-methylnitrosamino-1-(3-pyridyl)-butanone (NNK) in contrast to half of tumors induced by methylene chloride or vinyl carbamate. RAR-beta methylation was also detected in 54% of preneoplastic hyperplasias induced by treatment with NNK. Bisulfite sequencing of both premalignant and malignant lesions detected dense methylation in the same area observed in cell lines, substantiating that this gene is functionally inactivated at the earliest histologic stage of adenocarcinoma development. These studies demonstrate that aberrant methylation of RAR-beta is an early and common alteration in murine lung tumors induced by several environmentally relevant exposures.
    Carcinogenesis 05/2004; 25(4):623-9. · 5.70 Impact Factor

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