4.8 Article

A Cre-conditional MYCN-driven neuroblastoma mouse model as an improved tool for preclinical studies

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 34, Issue 26, Pages 3357-3368

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/onc.2014.269

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Genome Research Network of the German Ministry for Education and Research (NGFNplus) [PKN-01GS0894-6]
  2. European Union [259348-2]
  3. German research council [SFB 832]
  4. German Cancer Aid [111301]
  5. Agency for Innovation by Science and Technology (IWT)
  6. Fund for Scientific Research Flanders (FWO)

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Neuroblastoma, a childhood cancer that originates from neural crest-derived cells, is the most common deadly solid tumor of infancy. Amplification of the MYCN oncogene, which occurs in approximately 20-25% of human neuroblastomas, is the most prominent genetic marker of high-stage disease. The availability of valid preclinical in vivo models is a prerequisite to develop novel targeted therapies. We here report on the generation of transgenic mice with Cre-conditional induction of MYCN in dopamine a-hydroxylase-expressing cells, termed LSL-MYCN; Dbh-iCre. These mice develop neuroblastic tumors with an incidence of 475%, regardless of strain background. Molecular profiling of tumors revealed upregulation of the MYCN-dependent miR-17-92 cluster as well as expression of neuroblastoma marker genes, including tyrosine hydroxylase and the neural cell adhesion molecule 1. Gene set enrichment analyses demonstrated significant correlation with MYC-associated expression patterns. Array comparative genome hybridization showed that chromosomal aberrations in LSL-MYCN; Dbh-iCre tumors were syntenic to those observed in human neuroblastomas. Treatment of a cell line established from a tumor derived from a LSL-MYCN; Dbh-iCre mouse with JQ1 or MLN8237 reduced cell viability and demonstrated oncogene addiction to MYCN. Here we report establishment of the first Cre-conditional human MYCN-driven mouse model for neuroblastoma that closely recapitulates the human disease with respect to tumor localization, histology, marker expression and genomic make up. This mouse model is a valuable tool for further functional studies and to assess the effect of targeted therapies.

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