Cell Reports
Volume 6, Issue 5, 13 March 2014, Pages 844-854
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Article
PTEN C-Terminal Deletion Causes Genomic Instability and Tumor Development

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2014.01.030Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Loss of Pten C terminus leads to multiple tumors including B cell lymphoma

  • Pten C terminus is required for genomic stability and tumor suppression

  • Disruption of Pten activates the p53 pathway

  • PTEN suppresses tumorigenesis, whereas p53 mainly inhibits tumor progression

Summary

Tumor suppressor PTEN controls genomic stability and inhibits tumorigenesis. The N-terminal phosphatase domain of PTEN antagonizes the PI3K/AKT pathway, but its C-terminal function is less defined. Here, we describe a knockin mouse model of a nonsense mutation that results in the deletion of the entire Pten C-terminal region, referred to as PtenΔC. Mice heterozygous for PtenΔC develop multiple spontaneous tumors, including cancers and B cell lymphoma. Heterozygous deletion of the Pten C-terminal domain also causes genomic instability and common fragile site rearrangement. We found that Pten C-terminal disruption induces p53 and its downstream targets. Simultaneous depletion of p53 promotes metastasis without influencing the initiation of tumors, suggesting that p53 mainly suppresses tumor progression. Our data highlight the essential role of the PTEN C terminus in the maintenance of genomic stability and suppression of tumorigenesis.

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