Abstract

We report a subcutaneous mastocytoma in a mid-aged Italian greyhound dog with a small 41 bp genomic deletion of the c-kit gene leading to skipping of the authentic 3′-splice junction of intron 10. The shift to an alternative splice junction in exon 11 leads to a mis-spliced in-frame mRNA transcript with a 27 bp deletion of exon 11 coding for 9 amino acids in the juxtamembrane negative regulatory domain of c-kit tyrosine kinase. In the tumor, c-kit was activated as revealed by more pronounced c-kit-regulated signaling by the PI3K/Akt and G-coupled receptor pathways. The same 9 amino acids deletion was reported in several human gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) pointing to a remarkable similarity of c-kit activation by small deletions and aberrant splicing in humans and dogs, independent of exact sequence context, tumor type and location. Interestingly, the alternative splice junction in exon 11 has been conserved in Primates but less in other Orders with increased body temperature such as ruminants. We hypothesize that elevated body temperature has acted as evolutionary pressure to eliminate the alternative splice site at this hotspot. At a molecular level, hyperthermia may increase the frequency of small deletions in the c-kit gene by facilitating base slipping or hindering repair. An RT-qPCR assay was developed to detect c-kit alternative splicing in tumors and cell lines exposed to hyperthermia. The molecular mechanisms of tumorigenesis are discussed.

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