Checkpoint genes, activated in response to DNA damage and other stresses, are frequently targeted for alteration in cancer. Checkpoint kinase 2 (CHK2, CDS1, RAD53) is activated by ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) in response to gamma irradiation. Activated CHK2 stabilizes TP53, and acts on other cell cycle and stress regulators. These findings place CHK2 in the middle of a pathway frequently targeted in cancer. Because of this, and the observation that CHK2 mutations are inherited in some Li-Fraumeni cancer syndrome families, we decided to examine the role of CHK2 mutations in sporadic cancers. Exploiting the genomic sequence of chromosome 22, we looked for mutations in the exons and intron junctions of the CHK2 gene in DNA samples from 170 patients (57 osteosarcomas, 25 other sarcomas, 35 nonsmall-cell lung, 20 ovarian, and 33 breast cancers). Missense mutations affecting the forkhead and kinase domains were detected in four osteosarcomas and in one ovarian and one lung cancer. These findings of CHK2 gene mutations are consistent with osteosarcoma being a defining tumor of Li-Fraumeni syndrome. The occurrence of CHK2 mutations in sporadic cancers emphasizes the importance of the stress pathway which includes TP53.
These experiments were designed to quantify the impact of local or systemic irradiation on the healing of full-thickness skin wounds in mice. Mice received total-body hemibody, or skin irradiations, prior to wounding. Wound tensile strength measured on day 14 was used as an end point. The dose to achieve an isoeffect of 40% of the tensile strength of the wounded controls was 13 Gy less for the total-body exposure than for local skin irradiation. Histological observation showed markedly fewer inflammatory cells in the wounded skin sections from total-body and hemibody-irradiated mice compared with those receiving only skin irradiation. These data demonstrate that the healing response in irradiated skin is dependent upon the extent of hematopoietic suppression and that at low doses this determines the outcome rather than damage to fixed target cells such as dermal fibroblasts, which are relatively resistant to radiation.
The active form of vitamin D3 can regulate epidermal keratinization by inducing terminal differentiation; and mice lacking the vitamin D receptor display defects leading to postnatal alopecia. These observations implicate the vitamin D3 pathway in regulation of hair growth. We tested the ability of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 and its synthetic analogs to stimulate hair growth in biege/nude/xid (BNX) nu/nu (nude) mice exhibiting congenital alopecia. Nude mice were treated with different vitamin D3 analogs at doses that we had previously found to be the highest dose without inducing toxicity (hypercalcemia). The mice were monitored for hair growth and were scored according to a defined scale. Skin samples were taken for histological observation of hair follicles and for extraction of RNA and protein. Vitamin D3 analogs dramatically stimulated the hair growth of nude mice, although parental 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 had no effect. Hair growth occurred in a cyclical pattern, accompanied by formation of normal hair follicles and increased expression of certain keratins (Ha7, Ha8, and Hb3). Vitamin D3 analogs seem to act on keratinocytes to initiate hair follicle cycling and stimulate hair growth in mice that otherwise do not grow hair.
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