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Transgenic mice overexpressing protein kinase Cdelta in the epidermis are resistant to skin tumor promotion by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate.
156
Citations
43
References
1999
Year
ImmunologyDermatologyTransgenic MicePkcdelta ProteinTumor BiologyReceptor Tyrosine KinaseCancer Cell BiologyExperimental DermatologyCell SignalingSkin CancerProtein Kinase CdeltaSkin DevelopmentCutaneous BiologyMouse Skin CarcinogenesisTumor PromotionCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentSignal TransductionMedicine
To determine the role of protein kinase Cdelta in mouse skin carcinogenesis, we have developed transgenic FVB/N mouse lines expressing in the epidermis an epitope-tagged protein kinase Cdelta (T7-PKCdelta) regulated by the human keratin 14 promoter. The untreated T7-PKCdelta mice displayed excessive dryness in the skin of the tail with a variable penetrance over time. Histologically, the tail skin showed hyperplasia with evidence of hyperkeratosis. The epidermis of the rest of the T7-PKCdelta mouse was unremarkable. Despite this mild phenotype, the effects of PKCdelta overexpression on mouse skin tumor promotion by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) were dramatic. Two independent lines of T7-PKCdelta mice (16 and 37) expressing the T7-PKCdelta transgene were examined for responsiveness to skin tumor promotion by 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene and TPA. By immunoblot analysis, the T7-PKCdelta-16 and T7-PKCdelta-37 mice showed an 8- and 2-fold increase of PKCdelta protein. The T7-PKCdelta-16 mice averaged 300% more T7-PKCdelta activity than the T7-PKCdelta-37 mice did. The T7-PKCdelta-37 mice did not manifest any difference in tumor burden or incidence. However, the reduction in papilloma burden at 25 weeks of promotion for the T7-PKCdelta-16 mice relative to wild-type mice averaged 72 and 74% for males and females, respectively. The T7-PKCdelta-16 mice reached 50% papilloma incidence between 12 and 13 weeks of promotion compared with 8 weeks for wild-type mice. Furthermore, the carcinoma incidence was also reduced in T7-PKCdelta-16 mice. Carcinoma incidence at 25 weeks of promotion treatment was: wild-type females, 78%; T7-PKCdelta16 females, 37%; wild-type males, 45%; and T7- PKCdelta-16 males, 7%. Thus, PKCdelta when expressed at sufficient levels can suppress skin tumor promotion by TPA.
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