Abstract
A genome-wide screen for genetic alterations in radiation-induced thymic lymphomas generated from p53 +-and p53-/-mice showed frequent loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on chromosome 6. Fine mapping of these LOH regions revealed three non-overlapping regions, one of which was refined to a 0.2 Mb interval that contained only the gene encoding homeobox-interacting protein kinase 2 (Hipk2). More than 30% of radiation-induced tumors from both p53 +-and p53-/-mice showed heterozygous loss of one Hipk2 allele. Mice carrying a single inactive allele of Hipk2 in the germline were susceptible to induction of tumors by γ-radiation, but most tumors retained and expressed the wild-type allele, suggesting that Hipk2 is a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor gene for mouse lymphoma development. Heterozygous loss of both Hipk2 and p53 confers strong sensitization to radiation-induced lymphoma. We conclude that Hipk2 is a haploinsufficient lymphoma suppressor gene. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.
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Mao, J. H., Wu, D., Kim, I. J., Kang, H. C., Wei, G., Climent, J., … Balmain, A. (2012). Hipk2 cooperates with p53 to suppress γ-ray radiation-induced mouse thymic lymphoma. Oncogene, 31(9), 1176–1180. https://doi.org/10.1038/onc.2011.306
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