[PDF][PDF] Cell-specific effects of RB or RB/p107 loss on retinal development implicate an intrinsically death-resistant cell-of-origin in retinoblastoma

D Chen, I Livne-bar, JL Vanderluit, RS Slack… - Cancer cell, 2004 - cell.com
D Chen, I Livne-bar, JL Vanderluit, RS Slack, M Agochiya, R Bremner
Cancer cell, 2004cell.com
Retinogenesis involves expansion of pluripotent progenitors, specification of postmitotic
precursors, and terminal differentiation. Rb or Rb/p107 loss causes retinoblastoma in
humans or mice, respectively. One model suggests that Rb-or Rb/p107-deficient retinal
precursors have infinite proliferative capacity but are death-prone and must acquire an
antiapoptotic mutation. Indeed, we show that Rb/p107 loss does not affect progenitor
proliferation or precursor specification, but perturbs cell cycle exit in all seven retinal …
Abstract
Retinogenesis involves expansion of pluripotent progenitors, specification of postmitotic precursors, and terminal differentiation. Rb or Rb/p107 loss causes retinoblastoma in humans or mice, respectively. One model suggests that Rb- or Rb/p107-deficient retinal precursors have infinite proliferative capacity but are death-prone and must acquire an antiapoptotic mutation. Indeed, we show that Rb/p107 loss does not affect progenitor proliferation or precursor specification, but perturbs cell cycle exit in all seven retinal precursors. However, three precursors survive Rb/p107-loss and stop proliferating following terminal differentiation. Tumors arise from precursors that escape this delayed growth arrest. Thus, retinoblastoma arises from a precursor that has extended, not infinite, proliferative capacity, and is intrinsically death-resistant, not death-prone. We suggest that additional lesions common in retinoblastoma overcome growth arrest, not apoptosis.
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