APC is considered a gatekeeper for colorectal cancer (CRC). Cells with heterozygous APC mutations have altered expression profiles suggesting that the first APC hit may help set the stage for subsequent transformation. Therefore, we measured transformation efficiency following what we have designated as 'simultaneous' versus 'stepwise' Apc loss. We combined a conditional Apc allele (Apc CKO) with a Cre reporter gene and an out-of-frame Cre allele (Pms2 cre) that stochastically becomes functional by a frameshift mutation in single cells. Loss of one Apc allele (Apc CKO/+) had little consequence, whereas simultaneous loss of both Apc alleles (Apc CKO/CKO) resulted in increased clonal expansion (crypt fission), consistent with the gatekeeper function of Apc. Interestingly, our analyses showed that most of the Apc-deficient crypts in Apc CKO/CKO mice appeared normal, with morphological transformation, including β-catenin deregulation, occurring in only 17% of such crypts. To determine whether transformation efficiency was different following stepwise Apc loss, we combined Apc CKO with a germline mutant allele, either Apc Min or Apc 1638N. Transformation efficiency following stepwise Apc loss (Apc Min/CKO or Apc 1638N/CKO) was increased five-fold and essentially all of the Apc-deficient cells were dysplastic. In summary, our data suggest that the gatekeeper function of Apc consists of two roles, clonal expansion and morphological transformation, because simultaneous Apc loss frequently leads to occult clonal expansion without morphological transformation, whereas stepwise Apc loss more often results in visible neoplasia. Finally, that Apc-deficient cells in certain scenarios can retain a normal phenotype is unexpected and may have clinical implications for surveillance strategies to prevent CRC. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Fischer, J. M., Miller, A. J., Shibata, D., & Liskay, R. M. (2012). Different phenotypic consequences of simultaneous versus stepwise Apc loss. Oncogene, 31(16), 2028–2038. https://doi.org/10.1038/onc.2011.385
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