Abstract

The frequency and spectrum of Ha-ras mutations in benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P)-initiated/12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-promoted CD-1 mouse skin papillomas were characterized by amplifying high molecular weight papilloma DNA using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) followed by direct DNA sequencing. Analysis of 10 individual B[a]P-initiated early emergence papillomas indicated that 90% contained a Ha-ras mutation. Twenty percent of these papillomas contained a GGA-->GTA transversion in the 12th codon, 50% contained a GGC-->GTC transversion in the 13th codon and 20% contained a CAA-->CTA transversion in the 61st codon. A characteristic of 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA)-initiated papillomas, which contain an A-->T mutation in the 61st codon of Ha-ras, is that they exhibit a constitutive decrease in both protein kinase C (PKC) activity and PKC alpha and beta 2 isozyme levels when compared to epidermis. In the present study we found that total PKC activity, as well as PKC alpha and beta 2 isoforms, were markedly decreased in B[a]P-initiated early emergence papillomas and that this decrease was also accompanied by an altered subcellular distribution of PKC activity. The particulate/cytosolic (P/C) ratio of PKC activity in the epidermis was 0.39, whereas the P/C ratio in the papillomas was 0.77. These results demonstrate that B[a]P-initiated/TPA-promoted papillomas exhibit a high incidence of specific ras mutations and that PKC levels are constitutively decreased in these papillomas, indicating that an activated ras gene is associated with and may contribute to the observed decrease in PKC levels.

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