Abnormalities of the long arm of chromosome 1 (1q) represent the most frequent secondary chromosomal aberrations in Burkitt lymphoma (BL) and are observed almost exclusively in EBV-negative BL cell lines (BL-CLs). To verify chromosomal abnormalities, we cytogenetically investigated EBV-negative BL patient material, and to elucidate the 1q gain impact on gene expression, we performed qPCR with six 1q-resident genes and analyzed miRNA expression in BL-CLs. We observed 1q aberrations in the form of duplications, inverted duplications, isodicentric chromosome idic(1)(q10), and the accumulation of 1q12 breakpoints, and we assigned 1q21.2-q32 as a commonly gained region in EBV-negative BL patients. We detected MCL1, ARNT, MLLT11, PDBXIP1, and FCRL5, and 64 miRNAs, showing EBV- and 1q-gain-dependent dysregulation in BL-CLs. We observed MCL1, MLLT11, PDBXIP1, and 1q-resident miRNAs, hsa-miR-9, hsa-miR-9*, hsa-miR-92b, hsa-miR-181a, and hsa-miR-181b, showing copy-number-dependent upregulation in BL-CLs with 1q gains. MLLT11, hsa-miR-181a, hsa-miR-181b, and hsa-miR-183 showed exclusive 1q-gains-dependent and FCRL5, hsa-miR-21, hsa-miR-155, hsa-miR-155*, hsa-miR-221, and hsa-miR-222 showed exclusive EBV-dependent upregulation. We confirmed previous data, e.g., regarding the EBV dependence of hsa-miR-17-92 cluster members, and obtained detailed information considering 1q gains in EBV-negative and EBV-positive BL-CLs. Altogether, our data provide evidence for a non-random involvement of 1q gains in BL and contribute to enlightening and understanding the EBV-negative and EBV-positive BL pathogenesis.
Genotoxicity tests available today have several shortcomings. The widely applied Ames assay measures mutations in bacteria, thereby disregarding the physiological particularities of the human cell and organism.We provide first evidence for a new concept of genotoxicity detection in living human cell cultures. The data were obtained by use of a newly developed assay, which is based on the quantification of fluorescent signals, i.e. counting of the relative number of fluorescent cells in the sample. It is characterised by a short reaction time and fulfills the requirements for automated performance. The new system monitors chromosomal rearrangements and, therefore, is predicted to detect a broad spectrum of genotoxic substances. Indeed, we demonstrate the genotoxic effect of ionising radiation, of an Ames assay positive compound, and of two compounds which are poorly mutagenic in the Ames assay. The new assay will be optimised further and adapted to the requirements for routine analysis in order to help to further reduce animal experimentation in genotoxicity testing.
MALT1, a paracaspase, forms together with CARD11 and BCL10 a trimolecular complex, and, both as a scaffold protein constitutively associated with BCL10 and as a protease, is essential in B- and T-c...
Previous observations that human amniotic fluid cells (AFC) can be transformed by human adenovirus type 5 (HAdV-5) E1A/E1B oncogenes prompted us to identify the target cells in the AFC population that are susceptible to transformation. Our results demonstrate that one cell type corresponding to mesenchymal stem/stroma cells (hMSCs) can be reproducibly transformed by HAdV-5 E1A/E1B oncogenes as efficiently as primary rodent cultures. HAdV-5 E1-transformed hMSCs exhibit all properties commonly associated with a high grade of oncogenic transformation, including enhanced cell proliferation, anchorage-independent growth, increased growth rate, and high telomerase activity as well as numerical and structural chromosomal aberrations. These data confirm previous work showing that HAdV preferentially transforms cells of mesenchymal origin in rodents. More importantly, they demonstrate for the first time that human cells with stem cell characteristics can be completely transformed by HAdV oncogenes in tissue culture with high efficiency. Our findings strongly support the hypothesis that undifferentiated progenitor cells or cells with stem cell-like properties are highly susceptible targets for HAdV-mediated cell transformation and suggest that virus-associated tumors in humans may originate, at least in part, from infections of these cell types. We expect that primary hMSCs will replace the primary rodent cultures in HAdV viral transformation studies and are confident that these investigations will continue to uncover general principles of viral oncogenesis that can be extended to human DNA tumor viruses as well.It is generally believed that transformation of primary human cells with HAdV-5 E1 oncogenes is very inefficient. However, a few cell lines have been successfully transformed with HAdV-5 E1A and E1B, indicating that there is a certain cell type which is susceptible to HAdV-mediated transformation. Interestingly, all those cell lines have been derived from human embryonic tissue, albeit the exact cell type is not known yet. We show for the first time the successful transformation of primary human mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSCs) by HAdV-5 E1A and E1B. Further, we show upon HAdV-5 E1A and E1B expression that these primary progenitor cells exhibit features of tumor cells and can no longer be differentiated into the adipogenic, chondrogenic, or osteogenic lineage. Hence, primary hMSCs represent a robust and novel model system to elucidate the underlying molecular mechanisms of adenovirus-mediated transformation of multipotent human progenitor cells.