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Carcinogenesis |
Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Department of Cancer Biology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine Nashville, Tennessee 37232 [J. Y., J. L., Y. Y., C. L., A. R.], and Department of Adult Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 [R. A. D., L. C.]
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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The CXC chemokine CXCL1/MGSA/GRO is highly expressed in human Hs294T malignant melanoma cells. The MGSA protein was first purified and characterized in our laboratory (21
, 22)
and was subsequently found to have a sequence identical to the growth regulated gene, GRO (23)
. Since then, three genes encoding proteins with high homology to MGSA have been identified (MGSA/GRO
, ß, and
, now named as CXCL1, 2, and 3; Refs. 24
, 25
). CXCL1 is overexpressed in viral, inflammatory, and neoplastic disease (26, 27, 28, 29)
. Aberrant overexpression of CXCL1 has been implicated in transformation and melanoma tumor progression both in vivo and ex vivo (30, 31, 32)
. During melanoma-malignant progression, both the CXCL1 mRNA and protein levels are deregulated (33)
. Indeed, overexpression of CXCL1 in immortalized melanocytes enables these cells to form tumors in nude and SCID mice, and antibodies to CXCL1 suppress the growth of those tumors as well as reduce tumor angiogenesis (32)
. MIP-2, highly homologous to human MGSA, has been cloned and characterized (25)
. To explore the direct role of CXCL1 on the genesis of melanoma, we created a transgenic mouse, which directed expression of MIP-2 to melanocytes through use of the tyrosinase promoter-enhancer elements to drive expression of MIP-2 transgene. Transgenic MIP-2 founders were crossed with mice (C57BL/6:129) deficient for the INK4a/ARF locus. MIP-2 transgenic mice on the INK4a/ARF-deficient background exhibited an increased incidence of cutaneous melanoma, increased size of papilloma lesions, and increased mortality after chemical induction with DMBA. Nude mice injected with melanocytes, which expressed the MIP-2 transgene but which were null for the tumor suppressor INK4a/ARF (i.e., MIP-2+ and INK4a/ARF-/-), formed melanoma tumor lesions. These data are compatible with a role for MIP-2 in melanoma tumor progression when tumor suppressor genes such as INK4a/ARF are deficient.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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DMBA Treatment of Mice and Tumor Development.
Once MIP-2 transgenic founders were identified, the MIP-2 transgene-positive F1 generation was crossed with C57BL/6/129 INK4a/ARF+/- mice. The INK4a/ARF+/-, MIP-2 transgene-positive mice from F-3 were crossed with INK4a/ARF+/-, MIP-2 transgene-negative mice to generate MIP-2 transgene-positive or -negative mice on different INK4a/ARF genetic backgrounds (+/+, +/-, and -/-). Postnatal 58-week-old pups were treated with 100 µl of 0.1% of DMBA (Sigma Chemical Co.) in acetone on bare back skin once a week for 5 weeks. Mice were shaved 1 week before the treatment. The occurrence of melanoma and papilloma was monitored by gross appearance and recorded weekly for each mouse. Tumor diameter was measured using calipers, and total tumor volumes were calculated based on these measurements. Primary skin tumors were adapted to culture by mechanical mincing with sterilized razor blades, trypsinization at 4°C for 6 h, dissociation into single cell suspension, followed by establishing cultures of viable cells in selective culture of 154 medium containing human melanocyte growth supplement (Cascade Biologicals, Inc.).These cells were passaged 815 generations in culture medium selective for melanocyte proliferation to reduce contamination by keratinocytes or fibroblasts from the original host. The purity of melanoma cells was carefully examined by microscopy. For the nude mouse explant experiments, 2 x 106 derivative melanoma cells were injected s.c. into the nude mice and observed for 14 days.
Isolation and Culture of Transgenic Melanocytes and Transplant in Nude Mice.
Newborn pups from MIP-2 transgenic mice with an INK4a/ARF-/- genotype were sacrificed by CO2 asphyxiation. The mice were sterilized by soaking several times in Betadine Prep Solution and rinsed twice in ice-cold 70% ethanol. The skin was carefully peeled off, placed in HBSS with penicillin (100 units/ml), streptomycin(8.5 µg/ml), and gentamicin (10 µg/ml), then the peeled skin was placed dermis side down in a Petri dish containing blotting paper and 5 ml of 0.2% trypsin in HBSS containing penicillin (100 units/ml), streptomycin (8.5 µg/ml), and gentamicin (10 µg/ml); the Petri dish was placed in the refrigerator at 4°C overnight. The next day the trypsinized skins were carefully pulled away from the thin sheet of epidermis leaving the dermis on the blotting paper. The sheet of epidermis was rinsed in HBSS twice and cut in small pieces in 200 µl of culture medium. The tissue pieces from one mouse were transferred into a 75-ml flask with 6 ml of 154 medium containing human melanocyte growth supplement (Cascade Biologicals, Inc.), and individual cells were released by pipetting up and down. After 34 days of culture, cells were treated with 0.25% trypsin/EDTA for 12 min to isolate melanocytes from keratinocytes. The cells were passaged 815 times in culture medium selective for melanocytes, and the purity of the cell population was evaluated by microscopy to verify the pigmentation of the cultures. For determination of expression of the transgene protein, the purified melanocytes from mice, which were MIP-2 transgene-positive or MIP-2 transgene-negative were plated in equal numbers into six-well plates in triplicate, cultured for 24 h, changed to serum-free medium, and cultured an additional 24 h. The medium was collected and analyzed for immunoreactive MIP-2 protein levels by the Quantikine ELISA kit (R & D) according to the manufacturers procedures. The loss of the INK4a/ARF locus in these melanocytes was verified by PCR using DNA extracted from the cell cultures. Once the cultures of purified transgenic and nontransgenic melanocytes from INK4a/ARF-/- mice were established in vitro, 28 x 106 cells of each genotype were injected into the subscapular region of nude mice.
MIP-2 Protein Analysis.
Skin, kidney, and liver were collected from transgenic mice. Cytosolic proteins were extracted. Briefly the peeled pup skin was frozen in liquid nitrogen, the frozen skin was flashed with PBS, ground, and homogenized in 200 µl of PBS. The homogenized tissue was centrifuged at 10,000 x g for 15 min at 4°C to collect supernatant. MIP-2 levels were also determined in the skin of DMBA-treated C57BL/6 mice after two DMBA treatments using this procedure. Mouse blood was collected from mouse tails, allowed to clot at 4°C overnight, then blood samples were centrifuged, and serum was carefully separated. MIP-2 concentrations were measured using 200 mg of cytosolic proteins or serum following the standard protocol for the MIP-2 ELISA kit (R&D; Ref. 31
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Histological Analysis and Immunohistochemistry.
Mice were euthanized, and tumor samples and their organs (lungs, liver, spleen, and kidneys) were collected and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS (pH 7.6) for 24 h and postfixed in 70% ethanol. The fixed tissue was processed and embedded in paraffin using standard procedures. Tissue sections, which were 5-µm thick, were cut and mounted on positively charged slides. H&E staining was performed according to standard protocols. For immunoperoxidase reaction, the Vectastain Elite ABC kit (# PK-7200; Vector Laboratories) was used. Briefly, tissue sections were deparaffinized and rehydrated through xylenes and graded ethanol series, quenched for endogenous peroxidase activity by incubating the sections in 3% hydrogen peroxide in methanol, heated to enhance antigenity, and blocked in diluted normal horse serum (# PK-7100) at room temperature for 30 min. Anti-S100 polyclonal antibody (1:600 dilution; #Z0628; Dako Corporation), rabbit polyclonal antiserum against MIP-2 (1:100 dilution; a gift from Bob Streiter, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA), rabbit polyclonal antibody against p16INK4a(1:50 dilution; a gift from Charles J. Sherr, St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital, Memphis, TN), and rabbit polyclonal antibody against p53 (1:50 dilution; FL-393; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) were diluted in blocking solution, incubated on tissue sections at room temperature for 1 h or at 4°C for overnight, and washed in PBS. Sections were subsequently incubated with secondary biotinylated antibody (# PK-7100) and avidin-biotin peroxidase complexes (# PK-7100) following the standard protocol. AEC substrate (# K3469) was used as the chromogen, and hematoxylin was used as the nuclear counterstain. Positive staining appears as a red color on a blue nuclear background of cells.
| RESULTS |
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-32P-labeled human growth hormone polyadenylation fragment from the MIP-2 expression vector. The results in Fig. 1C
24-fold increase in MIP-2 protein expression in transgenic mice as compared with the nontransgenic mice. However, this was not associated with any obvious phenotype in an unstressed animal. The transgenic mice were of normal size, mated normally, had similar sized liters, similar coat color, and a similar life expectancy as the nontransgenic mice. To determine whether overexpression of the MIP-2 oncoprotein confers a melanocyte growth advantage, the melanocytes derived from INK4a/ARF null mice that expressed or did not express MIP-2 transgene were cultured at a density of 104 cells/ml in a six-well plate in serum-free medium for different days, and the cell number was counted. As indicated in Fig. 1E
Incidence of Cutaneous Melanoma in MIP-2 Transgenic Mice.
Because genetic background can affect the tendency to form specific types of tumors, we choose to develop MIP-2 transgenic mice on two different genetic backgrounds: C57BL/6 and BALB/c. Although BALB/c mice are albino, they still have melanocytes, which are capable of expressing the Tyr/MIP-2 transgene and forming amelanotic tumors. The defect in these mice has to do with production of melanin attributable to defective production of tyrosinase. These BALB/c mice carrying the MIP-2 transgene were crossed with the INK4a/ARF heterozygous mice on a C57BL/6/129 background to produce mice carrying the MIP-2 transgene on a black background as well as on a white background. We expanded the mice generated from this founder with the black background carrying the MIP-2 transgene for this study. The melanoma tumors formed on this Tyr-MIP-2/INK4a+/- background after DMBA treatment were pigmented, as would be expected, because the mice were pigmented. Once MIP-2 transgenic mice were established on the C57BL/6/129 mice of different INK4a/ARF genetic backgrounds (+/+, +/-, -/-), a total of 500 µg of DMBA was topically administered to 58-week-old pups over 5 weeks. DMBA treatment itself induced MIP-2 expression in the skin of treated mice to a level comparable with that of the MIP-2 transgenic mice (
26 fold induction compared with untreated wild-type mice), though this induction would be transient and not be sustained as it was in the transgenic mice.
Observations were made on the DMBA-treated mice through week 40. However, the majority of mice null for INK4a/ARF died early in the course of the experiment (1217 weeks) because of rapidly progressing lymphoma, too soon to observe the MIP-2 transgene influence on the genesis of melanoma. This occurred even without DMBA treatment in the INK4a/ARF-/- mice. The cohort studies here were based on breeding INK4a/ARF +/- mice with either of two founders of MIP-2 transgenic animals, one on the C57BL background and the other on the BALB/c background. The results summarized in Tables 1
and 2
and Figs. 2
and 3
represent data from experiments performed on progeny from two MIP-2 transgenic founders. Two types of controls were used: (a) the nontransgenic mice were treated following the same protocols as for transgenic animal; and (b) the solvent acetone was used to treat transgenic and nontransgenic mice as a negative control. The results show that 17 cases of cutaneous melanoma arose from 145 transgenic mice in which 44% mice had wild-type INK4a/ARF and 56% mice had heterozygous INK4a/ARF background. The latency period was 195 ± 42 days. Only 3 cases of cutaneous melanoma developed from 146 nontransgenic animals, of which the INK4a/ARF background was wild type in 38% of the mice and heterozygous in 62% of the mice. The data shown in Table 1
demonstrate that after DMBA treatment, the MIP-2 transgenic mice exhibited a significant increase in the incidence of melanoma (12%; P < 0.01) as compared with the nontransgenic group (2%) with similar INK4a/ARF genetic background (INK4a/ARF+/+ and INK4a/ARF+/-). Mice treated with acetone alone did not exhibit any skin lesions of melanoma or papilloma. Table 2
summarizes the comparative analysis of INK4a/ARF genotype in the cutaneous melanoma lesions, which developed from transgenic mice. There were 20 mice that developed primary melanoma of a total population of 291 mice, the genotypes of which were MIP-2+/INK4a/ARF +/-; MIP-2+/INK4a/ARF+/+; MIP-2-/INK4a/ARF+/-; and MIP-2-/INK4a/ARF+/+. No melanoma lesions (0%) appeared in 55 MIP-2-/INK4a+/+ mice; 2 cases of melanoma were observed in 64 MIP-2+/INK4a +/+ mice (3.1%), 3 melanoma lesions were observed in 91 MIP-2-/INK4a +/-mice (3.3%), and 15 melanoma lesions formed in 81 MIP-2+/INK4a +/- mice (18.5%; P < 0.01). Our results support the hypothesis that INK4a/ARF heterozygosity increases the likelihood of development of melanoma after carcinogen treatment. In these experiments, mice bearing melanoma lesions were sacrificed before the tumors became invasive, and we did not observe metastasis under these experimental conditions. In addition, we observed that MIP-2 transgenic mice also developed lymphoma, fibrocarcinoma, and hepatocellular carcinoma related to INK4a/ARF+/- background (Table 1)
. After DMBA treatment, papilloma lesions developed in both MIP-2 transgenic and nontransgenic mice with or without expression of both INK4a/ARF alleles. The size of papilloma lesions, which developed in the MIP-2 transgenic mice (2.8 ± 2.1 mm), was larger than that in nontransgenic group (1.25 ± 1.1 mm; P < 0.01). These lesions tended to merge over time, so we were unable to determine whether there were differences in the number of papilloma lesions. The survival time after DMBA treatment was decreased in MIP-2 transgenic mice (P < 0.05) as compared with the nontransgenic animals on the same genetic background (data not shown).
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Immunohistochemistry and Histological Analysis.
S-100 is a marker for neural crest-derived cells often used diagnostically for melanoma lesions. We characterized the S-100 immunoreactivity in skin tumor lesions arising in these transgenic mice (Fig. 3A)
and found that S-100 immunoreactive protein is expressed frequently in the dermal lesions of melanoma. Some pigmented cells exhibited atypic nuclei. No S-100 immunoreactivity was observed when primary antibody was substituted with normal serum or omitted from the immunostaining procedures (data not shown). Together with S-100 staining (Fig. 2, B and C
, and Fig. 3B
) and histological analysis of these lesions by a clinical pathologist (Dr. David Page, Vanderbilt University), the diagnosis of melanoma was confirmed. To examine the distribution of MIP-2 protein in the skin lesions, MIP-2 immunostaining was performed on C57BL/6 and BALB/c mice expressing and not expressing the MIP-2 transgene, and in mice INK4a/ARF+/+ and +/-. Pigmented melanoma lesions arising in MIP-2 transgenic mice exhibited fairly strong MIP-2 immunoreactivity, and even stronger immunoreactivity was associated with pigmented melanocytes in the hyperproliferative hair follicles (Fig. 3C)
. These data are in agreement with the ELISA results from transgenic mouse skin. A weak MIP-2 immunoreactivity was also observed in kidney, liver, and lung tissues (data not shown), and this occurs in transgenic and nontransgenic mice and is not related to the INK4a/ARF status. To explore the possibilities of loss of the tumor suppressor protein p16INK4a or mutation of the p53 protein in the melanoma tumors that formed, immunostaining for p16INK4a or mutant p53 were performed on the identified murine melanomas and their cultured cells derived from these tumor lesions. These cutaneous melanomas, either INK4a/ARF wild type or heterozygous, did not stain with antibody for the mutant p53 (data not shown), suggesting that p53 was not mutated in the melanocytes that formed tumors. PCR analysis of the DNA from cultures established from the melanoma tumors that arose on mice with the INK4a/ARF+/- background were heterozygous for INK4a/ARF (data not shown). p16INK4a immunostaining using an antibody from Charles Sherr, which does not recognize p15 or p19 revealed that there was heterogeneity within the tumors in regard to nuclear localization of p16INK4a. These data suggest that loss of p16INK4a may selectively occur in some of the melanoma cells in tumors, which develop on the MIP-2 transgene-positive INK4a/ARF heterozygous background in some but not all instances. However, it is difficult to be absolutely sure that the cells staining positively for INK4a within the tumor are indeed tumor cells as compared with stromal cells brought into the rapidly growing tumor.
Melanoma Formation in Nude Mice Transplanted with MIP-2 Transgenic Melanocytes Null for INK4a/ARF.
Overexpression of MIP-2 in melanocytes was associated with an increase in the incidence of cutaneous melanoma in C57BL/6 mice induced with DMBA. To additionally explore the possibility that MIP-2 expression could directly induce melanocyte transformation without addition of a chemical carcinogen, we isolated melanocytes from two new born pups of MIP-2 transgenic or nontransgenic mice null for INK4a/ARF and amplified them in vitro. Subsequently, two independent experiments were performed where different numbers of cells were inoculated into the subscapular region of nude mice. Both experiments showed similar results, and the data are summarized in Table 3
. Melanoma tumors were observed at the site of inoculation with Tyr-MIP-2 transgene-positive melanocytes null for INK4a/ARF (Fig. 4A)
with significant blood vessels formation on tumor surface after 34 months of latency. In the first experiment, four nude mice were inoculated with 8.4 x 106 INK4a/ARF-/- Tyr-MIP-2 transgene-positive cells/animal, and all four of the mice developed melanoma. A second group of eight nude mice were inoculated with 2 x 106 INK4a/ARF-/- Tyr-MIP-2 transgene-positive cells/mouse, and six of the eight mice developed melanoma. In contrast, no melanoma tumors appeared on those nude mice inoculated with the same number of melanocytes cultured from nontransgenic INK4a/ARF null mice (Tyr-MIP-2-, INK4a/ARF -/-), even when the observation time was extended for 2 additional months. The histological characteristics of cutaneous pigmented lesions were typical for melanoma (Fig. 4B)
. The transformed melanocytes showed the capacity for metastasis to lung (Fig. 4, D and E)
and invasion into muscle adjacent to the tumor (Fig. 4, C and F)
. Apart from histological analysis, S-100 was examined to confirm the neural crest origin of the tumor cells (Fig. 4, E and F)
. Moreover, the presence of pigment in the cell cultures established from these tumor lesions additionally confirmed the melanocytic origin of the tumor (data not shown).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Although the INK4a/ARF tumor suppressor gene has been shown to be mutated in melanoma-prone families, the lower frequency of loss of INK4a/ARF in spontaneous melanoma lesions, coupled with the linkage of loss of this gene with numerous other cancers (36)
, led some investigators to question the role of INK4a/ARF as the melanoma gene. Moreover, mice deficient in INK4a/ARF did not develop melanoma lesions unless a second factor such as oncogene H-ras was overexpressed in melanocytes (18)
. More recently, "pure" INK4a/p16 null mice have been developed, and the incidence of spontaneous tumor formation in these mice was evaluated (37
, 38)
. In one study the spontaneous tumor incidence was low and not statistically significant as compared with wild-type mice (37)
, whereas another study showed that loss of p16INK4a resulted in enhanced tumor formation, reduced tumor-free survival with a low incidence of spontaneous and carcinogen-induced melanoma, and reduced tumor-free survival after DMBA treatment (38)
. Moreover, fibroblasts cultured from these mice grew and underwent senescence similar to those from wild-type mice (37
, 38)
. However, when mice homozygous for the loss of p16INK4a and heterozygous for the loss of p19/ARF (Ink4a */
2,3) were developed, a wide variety of tumors formed including sarcomas, carcinomas, lymphoma, and melanoma (37)
. A single dose of DMBA treatment for Ink4a */
2,3 mice resulted in 50% incidence of cutaneous melanoma between 3 and 9 months of age, and 3 of 8 melanoma lesions showed metastasis to lymph nodes, lungs, spleen, or liver (37)
.
In our study, a 24-fold-increased expression of the MIP-2 transgene in melanocytes was accompanied by a 6-fold-increased incidence of skin melanoma in mice, which were heterozygous for INK4a/ARF+/-. Melanocytes completely deficient for INK4a/ARF, which did not express the MIP-2 transgene, did not form melanoma lesions in nude mice, whereas 83% of the mice injected with MIP-2 transgene-expressing INK4a/ARF-/- melanocytes formed melanoma lesions. We reasoned that the deficient INK4a/ARF may serve as a melanoma susceptibility modifier, which requires cooperation with an activated oncogene for tumor formation to occur. The selection of MIP-2 as the cooperating oncogene in our model was based on our previous findings that MGSA, the human homologue for MIP-2, was overexpressed in human malignant melanoma and was associated with enhanced ras activity and constitutive I
B kinase-nuclear factor-
B signaling. Both of these later events support maintenance of the malignant state (28
, 39)
. Moreover, overexpression of MGSA in immortalized melanocytes induces transformation (24
, 31)
and promotes angiogenesis on the course of tumorigenesis (40)
. Taken together with previous observations (22
, 39)
, this study demonstrates that MIP-2 can play an important role in transformation of melanocytes, which exhibit an underlying INK4a/ARF deficiency. However, it should be noted that we did not observe spontaneous melanoma lesions in the MIP-2+/INK4a/ARF+/- and in the MIP-2+/INK4a/ARF-/- mice. The mice are overtaken with lymphoma too early to allow sufficient time for development of melanoma. With carcinogen treatment, the incidence of melanoma development in the INK4a/ARF+/- mice is 12%, suggesting that retention of one INK4a/ARF allele is protective, even in the face of overexpression of MIP-2. This conclusion is compatible with the recent findings with the DMBA-treated INK4a */
2,3 mice (37)
. We observed that DMBA treatment itself can markedly induce the expression of MIP-2 (data not shown). This induction of MIP-2 by DMBA may facilitate papilloma formation but not melanoma formation, because only in the Tyr-MIP-2-transgenic mice exhibiting continuous expression of MIP-2 in melanocytes under the direction of the tyrosinase promoter/enhancer did we observe enhanced melanoma tumor formation after DMBA treatment. Moreover, the DMBA induction of melanoma occurred only in the mice with an INK4a/ARF+/- genetic background.
A role for INK4a/ARF as a potent tumor suppressor gene has been clearly established (35)
. In this study, analysis of the INK4a/ARF genotype in melanoma lesions revealed that 90% (18/20) of melanomas were deficient for one of the INK4a/ARF alleles (Table 2)
. p16INK4a, as an inhibitor of CDK, negatively regulates cell cycle. p19ARF triggers the p53-dependent checkpoint. Loss of either of these tumor suppressors may be associated with tumor formation (9
, 12)
. In our experiments in nude mice loss of INK4a/ARF alone was not sufficient to induce melanoma. However, loss of INK4a/ARF coupled with MIP-2 transgene expression in melanocytes results in melanoma tumor formation in the nude mouse xenograft model. On the basis of these observations, we suggest that enhanced MIP-2 expression in cooperation with loss of INK4a/ARF may play a potent role in the induction of melanoma in vivo. Whereas in the experiments described here we did not attempt to inject MIP-2 transgene-expressing melanocytes of an INK4a/ARF+/+ background into nude mice to determine whether tumors form, it is intuitive that because there is no in vitro immortalization or transformation event in the absence of loss of one of the INK4a/ARF alleles, tumors would not form. Moreover, melanocyte cell cultures established from MIP-2 transgene-positive INK4a/ARF+/+ mice could not be continuously passaged and expanded sufficiently to provide the numbers of cells required for the experiment.
The development of tumorigenicity, invasion, and metastasis in nude mice after injection of cultured cells derived from primary melanoma lesions, which arose in MIP-2 transgene-positive INK4a/ARF+/- mice, indicates that MIP-2 expression facilitates metastatic potential. However, the mechanistic link between MIP-2 pathways and melanoma metastasis is not well characterized. 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate induction of MIP-2 expression in mice is associated with enhanced neutrophil infiltration, keratinocyte proliferation, and papilloma formation after DMBA treatment (41) . MIP-2 has also been reported to recruit natural killer T cells to the spleen during tolerance induction, so enhanced production of MIP-2 might play some role in facilitating peripheral tolerance to the developing tumor (42) . Expression of CXCL8 in human melanoma lesions correlates with enhanced metastatic capacity (43 , 44) . In the DMBA-induced melanoma lesions, which arose on the mice heterozygous for INK4a/ARF, mice had to be sacrificed before the mice were overtaken with lymphoma or fibrosarcoma, so we could not follow these lesions for sufficient time to determine whether metastasis might occur if the tumors grew larger. In the transgenic model described here, MIP-2, plays a role in the genesis of primary skin melanoma, and INK4a/ARF deficiency may play a synergistic role with MIP-2 gene in melanocyte transformation. A role for MIP-2 in melanoma metastasis cannot be ruled out.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Supported by Department of Veterans Affairs Senior Career Scientist Award (to A. R.), NIH Grant CA56704 (to A. R.), and NIH Grant 5P30 AR41943. ![]()
2 These authors made nearly equal contributions to this work. ![]()
3 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Department of Cancer Biology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232. Phone: (615) 343-7777; Fax: (615) 343-4539; E-mail: Ann.Richmond{at}mcmail.Vanderbilt.edu ![]()
4 The abbreviations used are: INK, inhibitor of kinase; MIP, murine macrophage inflammatory protein; RB, retinoblastoma protein; MGSA, melanoma growth stimulatory activity; GRO, growth regulated protein; ARF, alternate reading frame; DMBA, 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene; CDK, cyclin-dependent kinase. ![]()
Received 6/21/01. Accepted 10/ 3/01.
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