N-myc is an essential downstream effector of shh signaling during both normal and neoplastic cerebellar growth

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Abstract

We examined the genetic requirements for the Myc family of oncogenes in normal Sonic hedgehog (Shh)-mediated cerebellar granule neuronal precursor (GNP) expansion and in Shh pathway-induced medulloblastoma formation. In GNP-enriched cultures derived from N-mycFl/Fl and c-mycFl/Fl mice, disruption of N-myc, but not c-myc, inhibited the proliferative response to Shh. Conditional deletion of c-myc revealed that, although it is necessary for the general regulation of brain growth, it is less important for cerebellar development and GNP expansion than N-myc. In vivo analysis of compound mutants carrying the conditional N-myc null and the activated Smoothened (ND2:SmoA1) alleles showed, that although granule cells expressing the ND2:SmoA1 transgene are present in the N-myc null cerebellum, no hyperproliferation or tumor formation was detected. Taken together, these findings provide in vivo evidence that N-myc acts downstream of Shh/Smo signaling during GNP proliferation and that N-myc is required for medulloblastoma genesis even in the presence of constitutively active signaling from the Shh pathway. ©2006 American Association for Cancer Research.

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Hatton, B. A., Knoepfler, P. S., Kenney, A. M., Rowitch, D. H., Moreno De Alborán, I., Olson, J. M., & Eisenman, R. N. (2006). N-myc is an essential downstream effector of shh signaling during both normal and neoplastic cerebellar growth. Cancer Research, 66(17), 8655–8661. https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-06-1621

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