Abstract

To characterize the effect(s) of transforming growth factor alpha (TGF alpha) during multistage carcinogenesis, we examined tumor development in pancreas and liver of transgenic mice that coexpressed TGF alpha with either viral (simian virus 40 T antigens [TAg]) or cellular (c-myc) oncogenes. In pancreas, TGF alpha itself was not oncogenic, but it nevertheless dramatically accelerated growth of tumors induced by either oncogene alone, thereby reducing the host life span up to 60%. Coexpression of TGF alpha and TAg produced an early synergistic growth response in the entire pancreas together with the more rapid appearance of preneoplastic foci. Coexpression of TGF alpha and c-myc also accelerated tumor growth in situ and produced transplantable acinar cell carcinomas whose rate of growth was TGF alpha dependent. In liver, expression of TGF alpha alone increased the incidence of hepatic cancer in aged mice. However, coexpression of TGF alpha with c-myc or TAg markedly reduced tumor latency and accelerated tumor growth. Significantly, expression of the TGF alpha and myc transgenes in hepatic tumors was induced up to 20-fold relative to expression in surrounding nonneoplastic liver, suggesting that high-level overexpression of these proteins acts as a major stimulus for tumor development. Finally, in both pancreas and liver, combined expression of TGF alpha and c-myc produced tumors with a more malignant (less differentiated) appearance than did expression of c-myc alone, consistent with an influence of TGF alpha upon the morphological character of c-myc-induced tumor progression. These findings demonstrate the importance of TGF alpha expression during multistage carcinogenesis in vivo and point to a major role for this growth factor as a potent stimulator of tumor growth.

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