The Expression of a Truncated HMGI-C Gene Induces Gigantism Associated with Lipomatosis

S Battista, V Fidanza, M Fedele, AJP Klein-Szanto… - Cancer research, 1999 - AACR
S Battista, V Fidanza, M Fedele, AJP Klein-Szanto, E Outwater, H Brunner, M Santoro…
Cancer research, 1999AACR
Rearrangements of the HMGI-C gene have frequently been detected in human benign
tumors of mesenchymal origin, including lipomas. The HMGI-C protein has three AT-hook
domains and an acidic COOH-terminal tail. The HMGI-C modifications consist in the loss of
the C-tail and the fusion with ectopic sequences. Recent results show that the loss of the
COOH-terminal region, rather than the acquisition of new sequences, is sufficient to confer to
HMGI-C the ability to transform NIH3T3 cells. Therefore, transgenic mice carrying a HMGI-C …
Abstract
Rearrangements of the HMGI-C gene have frequently been detected in human benign tumors of mesenchymal origin, including lipomas. The HMGI-C protein has three AT-hook domains and an acidic COOH-terminal tail. The HMGI-C modifications consist in the loss of the C-tail and the fusion with ectopic sequences. Recent results show that the loss of the COOH-terminal region, rather than the acquisition of new sequences, is sufficient to confer to HMGI-C the ability to transform NIH3T3 cells. Therefore, transgenic mice carrying a HMGI-C construct (HMGI-C/T), containing only the three AT-hook domains, were generated. The HMGI-C/T mice showed a giant phenotype, together with a predominantly abdominal/pelvic lipomatosis, suggesting a pivotal role of the HMGI-C truncation in the generation of human lipomas.
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