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Increased frequency of spontaneous skin tumors in transgenic mice which overexpress ornithine decarboxylase.
142
Citations
13
References
1995
Year
PathologyDermatologyTransgenic MicePolyamine BiosynthesisEpigeneticsTumor BiologyCancer Cell BiologySkin HomeostasisExperimental DermatologyCancer ResearchSkin CancerOrnithine DecarboxylaseSkin DevelopmentAllergyCutaneous BiologySpontaneous Skin TumorsDermatopathologyEndocrinologyGene ExpressionDevelopmental BiologyMedicine
Ornithine decarboxylase, a critical regulatory enzyme for polyamine biosynthesis, is highly inducible by growth-promoting stimuli in mouse epidermis but the enzyme level is only transiently elevated due to rapid turnover of the protein. Here we report that constitutive overexpression of the enzyme in the skin of transgenic mice causes several phenotypic abnormalities. Effects observed include development of dermal follicular cysts, excessive skin wrinkling, enhanced nail growth, alopecia, and spontaneous tumor development. These results indicate that up-regulation of polyamine biosynthesis can profoundly disturb skin homeostasis and alter susceptibility to neoplastic development.
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