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Carcinogenesis, Vol. 22, No. 5, 751-756, May 2001
© 2001 Oxford University Press


CARCINOGENESIS

Telomerase activation and p53 mutations in urethane-induced A/J mouse lung tumor development

Joji Ohno, Yoshitsugu Horio4,, Yoshitaka Sekido1,, Yoshinori Hasegawa, Masahide Takahashi2,, Jun-ichi Nishizawa3,, Hidehiko Saito, Fuyuki Ishikawa3, and Kaoru Shimokata1,

First Department of Internal Medicine,
1 Department of Clinical Preventive Medicine and
2 Department of Pathology II, Nagoya University School of Medicine, Nagoya 466-8550, Japan and
3 Graduate School of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Yokohama 226-8501, Japan

The mouse telomerase holoenzyme, which synthesizes telomeric DNA de novo, is a ribonucleoprotein complex that includes the mouse telomerase RNA component (mTERC), mouse telomerase-associated protein (mTEP1) and mouse telomerase reverse transcriptase (mTERT). To determine the role of telomerase in urethane-induced lung tumorigenesis in A/J mice we examined telomerase activity and the expression of each telomerase subunit in 20 tumor samples, harvested at 16, 28, 40 and 50 weeks after urethane treatment. The telomeric repeat amplification protocol assay showed that statistically significant telomerase activation occurred both early and late in tumorigenesis. Semi-quantitative reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed that mRNA expression levels of mTEP1 and mTERT were up-regulated during tumor progression, while mTERC expression was not significantly different between tumors and normal lung. We further examined mTEP1 protein expression in normal lung tissue and lung tumors; western blot analysis showed preferential expression of mTEP1 protein in lung tumors compared with normal lung and immunohistochemistry revealed that a majority of the adenoma cells were positively stained in the nucleus, whereas only a few of the adjacent normal alveolar cells were immunoreactive. In addition, we investigated DNAs of the 20 tumor samples by single strand conformation polymorphism and sequencing analyses to examine whether alterations of the p53 gene in exons 5–8 were associated with telomerase activity. Although we found one nonsense, two missense, two silent and one simultaneous double mutation at different codons in six late stage tumors, there was no apparent correlation between telomerase activity and p53 mutations. Collectively, these results suggest that mTEP1 as well as mTERT may be involved in the regulation of telomerase activity and that telomerase activation may contribute to lung tumorigenesis in A/J mice independently of p53 gene alterations.


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