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Rb deletion in mouse mammary progenitors induces luminal-B or basal-like/EMT tumor subtypes depending on p53 status
Zhe Jiang, Tao Deng, Robert Jones, Huiqin Li, Jason I. Herschkowitz, Jeff C. Liu, Victor J. Weigman, Ming-Sound Tsao, Timothy F. Lane, Charles M. Perou, Eldad Zacksenhaus
Zhe Jiang, Tao Deng, Robert Jones, Huiqin Li, Jason I. Herschkowitz, Jeff C. Liu, Victor J. Weigman, Ming-Sound Tsao, Timothy F. Lane, Charles M. Perou, Eldad Zacksenhaus
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Research Article Oncology

Rb deletion in mouse mammary progenitors induces luminal-B or basal-like/EMT tumor subtypes depending on p53 status

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Abstract

Breast cancer is a highly heterogeneous disease, with several different subtypes being characterized by distinct histology, gene expression patterns, and genetic alterations. The tumor suppressor gene retinoblastoma 1 (RB1) is frequently lost in both luminal-B and triple-negative tumor (TNT; i.e., estrogen receptor–, progesterone receptor–, and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2–negative) breast cancer subtypes. However, a causal role for RB1 loss in different subtypes remains undefined. Here we report that deletion of Rb alone or together with its relative p107 in mouse mammary stem/bipotent progenitor cells induced focal acinar hyperplasia with squamous metaplasia. These lesions progressed into histologically diverse, transplantable mammary tumors with features of either luminal-B or TNT subtypes. The TNTs included basal-like tumors as well as tumors that exhibited epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). The EMT-type tumors and a subset of the basal-like tumors, but not luminal-B–like tumors, expressed mutant forms of the tumor suppressor p53. Accordingly, targeted deletion of both Rb and p53 in stem/bipotent progenitors led to histologically uniform, aggressive, EMT-type tumors. Reintroduction of Rb into these tumor cells suppressed growth in vitro and tumor formation in vivo. These results establish a causal role for Rb loss in breast cancer in mice and demonstrate that cooperating oncogenic events, such as mutations in p53, dictate tumor subtype after Rb inactivation.

Authors

Zhe Jiang, Tao Deng, Robert Jones, Huiqin Li, Jason I. Herschkowitz, Jeff C. Liu, Victor J. Weigman, Ming-Sound Tsao, Timothy F. Lane, Charles M. Perou, Eldad Zacksenhaus

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Figure 6

RbΔfl mammary tumors cluster with DMBA and Tag-induced basal-like or T121-induced luminal-B–like breast tumors.

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RbΔfl mammary tumors cluster with DMBA and Tag-induced basal-like or T1...
(A) Overview of expression of 866 reference genes in tumors from RbΔfl and 13 mouse models of breast cancer. Colored regions at left correspond to the regions shown in B–F. (B) Selected genes representing the luminal gene cluster. (C) CK5 basal-like gene cluster. (D) CK14 basal-like gene cluster. (E) Proliferation-associated gene cluster. (F) EMT gene cluster. (G) Subset of proliferation-associated genes. Asterisks at the top mark the 9 RbΔfl tumors; tumor models that clustered with RbΔfl tumors are highlighted at the bottom. DMBA, 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]-anthracene.

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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