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Autoregulation of the human N-myc oncogene is disrupted in amplified but not single-copy neuroblastoma cell lines
- Louise E Sivak1,
- Kuei-Fang Tai1,3,
- Robin S Smith2,
- Patrick A Dillon4,
- Garrett M Brodeur5 &
- …
- William L Carroll1,2,3
Oncogenevolume 15, pages1937–1946 (1997)Cite this article
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Abstract
Amplification of the N-myc gene is a significant adverse prognostic factor in neuroblastoma, a common childhood tumor. In non-transformed cells,myc expression is controlled through an autoregulatory circuit, through which elevated Myc protein levels lead to down-regulation ofmyc transcription. The precise mechanism ofmyc gene autoregulation is unknown. Loss of c-myc autoregulation has been documented in transformed cells from a number of different lineages, but N-myc autoregulation has not yet been investigated. In neuroblastoma, the increased N-Myc protein produced by amplified tumors would be expected to silence N-myc transcription if the autoregulatory loop were intact. To determine whether N-myc autoregulation is operative in human neuroblastoma, and to localizecis-acting elements which mediate N-myc autosuppression, we transfected a series of N-myc 5′ promoter constructs into a panel of human neuroblastoma cell lines carrying one or multiple copies of N-myc. The transfected promoter was equally active in single-copy and amplified lines. Significant promoter activity in the presence of abundant Myc protein in amplified neuroblastoma lines indicates that autoregulation is disabled in this subset of tumors. To investigate whether single-copy lines produce insufficient N-Myc protein to trigger autosuppression yet retain an intact autoregulatory circuit, we transfected neuroblastoma lines with 5′ promoter constructs in the presence of a c- or N-myc expression vector. Overexpression of c- or N-Myc resulted in diminution of activity of both the transfected promoter and the endogenous N-myc gene in single-copy, but not amplified lines. Using a series of 5′ promoter-deletion minigenes, we localized acis-acting element required for autoregulation close to the transcription start sites. While the precise mechanism of autosuppression remains unknown, we demonstrated that Myc is incapable of silencing the adenovirus major late promoter (AdMLP) in neuroblastoma cells, indicating that Myc suppression of its own promoter and the AdMLP involve distinct components. These studies provide the first systematic investigation of autoregulation in neuroblastoma, and indicate that single-copy neuroblastoma lines produce insufficient N-Myc protein to activate downstream effector(s) of autosuppression; the autoregulatory circuit is otherwise intact. Amplified lines, in contrast, have lost autoregulation.
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Authors and Affiliations
Department of Pathology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Louise E Sivak, Kuei-Fang Tai & William L Carroll
Department of Pediatrics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Robin S Smith & William L Carroll
Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Kuei-Fang Tai & William L Carroll
Division of Pediatric Surgery, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Patrick A Dillon
Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Garrett M Brodeur
- Louise E Sivak
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- Kuei-Fang Tai
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- Robin S Smith
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- Patrick A Dillon
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- Garrett M Brodeur
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- William L Carroll
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Sivak, L., Tai, KF., Smith, R.et al. Autoregulation of the human N-myc oncogene is disrupted in amplified but not single-copy neuroblastoma cell lines.Oncogene15, 1937–1946 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.onc.1201363
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