2004
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0308217100
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Early onset of neoplasia in the prostate and skin of mice with tissue-specific deletion of Pten

Abstract: PTEN is a tumor suppressor gene mutated in various advanced human neoplasias, including glioblastomas and prostate, breast, endometrial, and kidney cancers. This tumor suppressor is a lipid phosphatase that negatively regulates cell survival and proliferation mediated by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase͞protein kinase B signaling. Using the Cre-loxP system, we selectively inactivated Pten in murine tissues in which the MMTV-LTR promoter is active, resulting in hyperproliferation and neoplastic changes in Pten-nul… Show more

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Cited by 146 publications
(112 citation statements)
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“…PTEN is one of the tumor suppressor genes commonly mutated in various advanced human cancers including glioblastomas, as well as prostate, breast, endometrial and renal cancers (Stambolic et al, 1998). Skin-specific PTEN knockout mice develop spontaneous skin tumors and show earlier onset of chemically induced skin carcinogenesis (Suzuki et al, 2003;Backman et al, 2004). Adenoviral delivery of PTEN suppresses the malignant phenotype of prostate and ovarian cancer cells (Minaguchi et al, 1999;Davies et al, 2002).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…PTEN is one of the tumor suppressor genes commonly mutated in various advanced human cancers including glioblastomas, as well as prostate, breast, endometrial and renal cancers (Stambolic et al, 1998). Skin-specific PTEN knockout mice develop spontaneous skin tumors and show earlier onset of chemically induced skin carcinogenesis (Suzuki et al, 2003;Backman et al, 2004). Adenoviral delivery of PTEN suppresses the malignant phenotype of prostate and ovarian cancer cells (Minaguchi et al, 1999;Davies et al, 2002).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…PTEN is probably not a major regulator of cell proliferation in the initial segment because loss of Pten did not alter proliferation in younger knockout mice and only resulted in a moderate increase in cell proliferation from 16 wk onward. In tissue-specific Pten knockout animals, loss of Pten led to cancer development in some animals, but not in others (21,22). For those tissues in which cancer was not observed, additional molecular events were needed to overturn the regulatory machinery of cell proliferation and survival (15).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A more severe reduction in epidermal layers and hair follicles at birth was reported in Akt1 À/À Akt2 À/À and Akt1 À/À Akt3 þ /À mutant mice (Peng et al, 2003;Yang et al, 2005), suggesting redundant functions among Akt family members in the skin. More intriguingly, the keratinocyte-specific deletion of Pten resulted in epidermal hyperplasia and accelerated hair morphogenesis during the postnatal period Backman et al, 2004). Using conditional activation of Akt Flow cytometric analysis of epidermal cells.…”
Section: Role Of Akt Signaling In Epidermal Stem Cells and Progenitorsmentioning
confidence: 99%