Abstract

The Arf tumor suppressor acts as a sensor of oncogenic signals, countering aberrant proliferation in large part via activation of the p53 transcriptional program, though a number of p53-independent functions have been described. Mounting evidence suggests that, in addition to promoting tumorigenesis via disruptions in the homeostatic balance between cell proliferation and apoptosis of overt cancer cells, genetic alterations leading to tumor suppressor loss of function or oncogene gain of function can also incite tumor development via effects on the tumor microenvironment. In a transgenic mouse model of multi-stage pancreatic neuroendocrine carcinogenesis (PNET) driven by inhibition of the canonical p53 and Rb tumor suppressors with SV40 large T-antigen (Tag), stochastic progression to tumors is limited in part by a requirement for initiation of an angiogenic switch. Despite inhibition of p53 by Tag in this mouse PNET model, concomitant disruption of Arf via genetic knockout resulted in a significantly accelerated pathway to tumor formation that was surprisingly not driven by alterations in tumor cell proliferation or apoptosis, but rather via earlier activation of the angiogenic switch. In the setting of a constitutional p53 gene knockout, loss of Arf also accelerated tumor development, albeit to a lesser degree. These findings demonstrate that Arf loss of function can promote tumorigenesis via facilitating angiogenesis, at least in part, through p53-independent mechanisms.

Highlights

  • The ARF tumor suppressor serves as a sensor of hyperproliferative signals, resulting in p53-dependent growth arrest and apoptosis [1,2,3]

  • In addition to the canonical tumor suppressor activities of p53 in mediating cell cycle arrest, apoptosis and senescence, p53 can function in maintaining tumor dormancy via suppression of angiogenesis [32]

  • In a multi-stage carcinogenesis model in which p53 is functionally inhibited by SV-40 Tag, we demonstrate that p19Arf can modulate the angiogenesis program, at least in part via p53-independent mechanisms

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Summary

Introduction

The ARF (alternative reading frame; p14ARF in human, p19Arf in mouse) tumor suppressor serves as a sensor of hyperproliferative signals, resulting in p53-dependent growth arrest and apoptosis [1,2,3]. A more recent study suggested a context-dependence to the outcome of p19Arf loss during oncogenesis in the setting of Pten-deficiency, in that p19Arf loss imparted a partial inhibitory function during prostate carcinogenesis, but abolished senescence and promoted hyperproliferation and transformation of mouse embryo fibroblasts. In both settings the differential outcome of p19Arf loss occurred without effects on p53 activity [12]

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