4.8 Article

Genomic instability during myc-induced lymphomagenesis in the bursa of fabricius

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 25, Issue 47, Pages 6325-6335

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1209646

Keywords

myc oncogene; gene amplification; DNA palindromes

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA-20068, CA-109365] Funding Source: Medline

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Retroviral vector-mediated overexpression of c-myc in embryonic bursal precursors induces multi-staged tumorigenesis beginning with preneoplastic-transformed follicles (TF) and progressing to clonal metastatic B-cell lymphomas. Using a 13K chicken cDNA microarray, specifically enriched for chicken immune system expressed sequence tagged (ESTs), we carried out array-based comparative genomic hybridization (array-CGH) and detected significant DNA copy number change at many loci on most or all chromosomes in both early TF and end-stage lymphomas. Formation of long palindromes, through breakage-fusion-bridge cycles, is thought to play an early role in gene amplification. Employing genome-wide analysis of palindrome formation (GAPF), we detected extensive palindrome formation in early TF and end-stage lymphomas. The population of loci showing amplification by array-CGH was enriched for palindromes detected by GAPF providing strong evidence for genetic instability early in Myc-induced tumorigenesis and further support for the role of palindromes in gene amplification. Comparing gene copy number change and RNA expression changes pro. led on the same cDNA array, we detected very little consistent contribution of gene copy number change to RNA expression changes. Palindromic loci in TF and tumors, however, were expressed, many at high levels, suggesting an abundance of RNA species with long double-stranded segments generated during tumorigenesis.

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