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High-Grade Glioma Formation Results from Postnatal...
Journal article

High-Grade Glioma Formation Results from Postnatal Pten Loss or Mutant Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Expression in a Transgenic Mouse Glioma Model

Abstract

High-grade gliomas are devastating brain tumors associated with a mean survival of <50 weeks. Two of the most common genetic changes observed in these tumors are overexpression/mutation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) vIII and loss of PTEN/MMAC1 expression. To determine whether somatically acquired EGFRvIII expression or Pten loss accelerates high-grade glioma development, we used a previously characterized RasB8 glioma-prone mouse strain, in which these specific genetic changes were focally introduced at 4 weeks of age. We show that both postnatal EGFRvIII expression and Pten inactivation in RasB8 mice potentiate high-grade glioma development. Moreover, we observe a concordant loss of Pten and EGFR overexpression in nearly all high-grade gliomas induced by either EGFRvIII introduction or Pten inactivation. This novel preclinical model of high-grade glioma will be useful in evaluating brain tumor therapies targeted to the pathways specifically dysregulated by EGFR expression or Pten loss.

Authors

Wei Q; Clarke L; Scheidenhelm DK; Qian B; Tong A; Sabha N; Karim Z; Bock NA; Reti R; Swoboda R

Journal

Cancer Research, Vol. 66, No. 15, pp. 7429–7437

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Publication Date

August 1, 2006

DOI

10.1158/0008-5472.can-06-0712

ISSN

0008-5472

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