Abstract

BackgroundNeuroblastoma is a solid tumour of childhood often with an unfavourable outcome. One common genetic feature in aggressive tumours is 1p-deletion.The α-enolase (ENO1) gene is located in chromosome region 1p36.2, within the common region of deletion in neuroblastoma. One alternative translated product of the ENO1 gene, known as MBP-1, acts as a negative regulator of the c-myc oncogene, making the ENO1 gene a candidate as a tumour suppressor gene.MethodsMethods used in this study are transfection of cDNA-vectors and in vitro transcribed mRNA, cell growth assay, TUNEL-assay, real-time RT-PCR (TaqMan) for expression studies, genomic sequencing and DHPLC for mutation detection.ResultsHere we demonstrate that transfection of ENO1 cDNA into 1p-deleted neuroblastoma cell lines causes' reduced number of viable cells over time compared to a negative control and that it induces apoptosis. Interestingly, a similar but much stronger dose-dependent reduction of cell growth was observed by transfection of in vitro transcribed ENO1 mRNA into neuroblastoma cells. These effects could also be shown in non-neuroblastoma cells (293-cells), indicating ENO1 to have general tumour suppressor activity.Expression of ENO1 is detectable in primary neuroblastomas of all different stages and no difference in the level of expression can be detected between 1p-deleted and 1p-intact tumour samples. Although small numbers (11 primary neuroblastomas), there is some evidence that Stage 4 tumours has a lower level of ENO1-mRNA than Stage 2 tumours (p = 0.01). However, mutation screening of 44 primary neuroblastomas of all different stages, failed to detect any mutations.ConclusionOur studies indicate that ENO1 has tumour suppressor activity and that high level of ENO1 expression has growth inhibitory effects.

Highlights

  • Introduction of in vitro transcribedENO1 mRNA into neuroblastoma cells induces cell deathKatarina Ejeskär*1,2, Cecilia Krona1, Helena Carén1, Faten Zaibak2, Lingli Li2, Tommy Martinsson1 and Panayiotis A Ioannou2Address: 1Dept

  • Here we demonstrate that transfection of ENO1 cDNA into 1p-deleted neuroblastoma cell lines causes' reduced number of viable cells over time compared to a negative control and that it induces apoptosis

  • Our studies demonstrate that ENO1, a gene mapping to a region commonly deleted in advanced neuroblastoma tumours, can act as a strong tumour suppressor by slowing down the cell growth and inducing apoptosis

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Introduction of in vitro transcribedENO1 mRNA into neuroblastoma cells induces cell deathKatarina Ejeskär*1,2, Cecilia Krona, Helena Carén, Faten Zaibak, Lingli Li2, Tommy Martinsson and Panayiotis A Ioannou2Address: 1Dept. One common genetic feature in aggressive tumours is 1p-deletion. The α-enolase (ENO1) gene is located in chromosome region 1p36.2, within the common region of deletion in neuroblastoma. The most common genetic features of this tumour are amplification of the oncogene MYCN, deletions of part of chromosome arm 1p, gain of parts of 17q and triploidy. Other research groups have defined regions telomeric to marker D1S214 [4], still the major part of all 1p-deleted neuroblastoma tumours does include this region. We hypothesise that this region harbours one or more tumour suppressor genes, which plays an important role in neuroblastoma tumourigenesis. There is still no conclusive evidence that anyone of these candidate genes could function as a neuroblastoma tumour suppressor gene

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.