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A genetic screen to identify genes that rescue the slow growth phenotype of c-myc null fibroblasts.

K Berns ,
E M Hijmans ,
E Koh ,
G Q Daley ,
R Bernards

Abstract

The c-myc gene is frequently over-expressed in human cancers and is involved in regulation of proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis. c-Myc is a transcription factor that acts primarily by regulating the expression of other genes. However, it has been very difficult to identify bona fide c-Myc target genes that explain its diverse biological activities. The recent generation of c-myc deficient Rat1A fibroblasts with a profound and stable growth defect provides a new system to search for genes that can substitute for c-myc in proliferation. In this study, we have attempted to identify genes that rescue the slow growth phenotype of c-myc null cells through introduction of a series of potent cell cycle regulatory genes and several retroviral cDNA expression libraries. None of the candidate genes tested, including SV40 T-antigen and adenovirus E1A, caused reversal of the c-myc null growth defect. Furthermore, extensive screens with high-complexity retroviral cDNA libraries from three different tissue sources revealed that only c-myc and N-myc rescued the c-myc null slow-growth phenotype. Our data support the notion that there are no functional equivalents of the myc family of proto-oncogenes and also suggest that there are no c-Myc-activated genes that alone can substitute for c-Myc in control of cell proliferation.

More about this publication

Oncogene

Volume 19
Issue nr. 29
Pages 3330-4
Publication date 06-07-2000

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/sj.onc.1203639
Europe PubMed Central 10918589
Pubmed 10918589

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