Pituitary Hypoplasia in Pttg–/– Mice Is Protective for Rb+/– Pituitary Tumorigenesis

Vera Chesnokova, Kalman Kovacs, Anna-Valeria Castro, Svetlana Zonis and Shlomo Melmed

Cedars-Sinai Research Institute (V.C., A.-V.C., S.Z., S.M.), David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California 90048; and St. Michael’s Hospital (K.K.), Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5B 1W8

Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Shlomo Melmed, M.D., Academic Affairs, Room 2015, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, 8700 Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90048. E-mail: melmed{at}csmc.edu


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 REFERENCES
 
Pituitary tumor transforming gene (Pttg) is induced in pituitary tumors and associated with increased tumor invasiveness. Pttg-null mice do not develop tumors, but exhibit pituitary hypoplasia, whereas mice heterozygous for the retinoblastoma (Rb) deletion develop pituitary tumors with high penetrance. Pttg-null mice were therefore cross-bred with Rb+/– mice to test the impact of pituitary hypoplasia on tumor development. Before tumor development, Rb+/–Pttg–/– mice have smaller pituitary glands with fewer cycling pituitary cells and exhibit induction of pituitary p21 levels. Pttg silencing in vitro with specific short hairpin interfering RNA in AtT20 mouse corticotrophs led to a marked induction of p21 mRNA and protein levels, decreased RB phosphorylation, and subsequent 24% decrease in S-phase cells. Eighty-six percent of Rb+/–Pttg+/+ mice develop pituitary adenomas by 13 months, in contrast to 30% of double-crossed Rb+/–Pttg–/– animals (P < 0.01). Pituitary hypoplasia, associated with suppressed cell proliferation, prevents the high penetrance of pituitary tumors in Rb+/– animals, and is therefore a protective determinant for pituitary tumorigenesis.


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 REFERENCES
 
PITUITARY TUMORS are invariably benign and exhibit high prevalence and potential for significant morbidity (1). Like other differentiated neuroendocrine tissues, the pituitary gland displays trophic hormone cell plasticity in response to physiological and homeostatic demands (2, 3). Intrapituitary growth factors, hypothalamic hormones, inactivating tumor suppressor genes, or activated oncogene mutations have been implicated in the spectrum of pathogenetic events leading to pituitary hyperplasia and adenoma development (1, 4, 5).

Mice bearing a single retinoblastoma (Rb) mutant allele develop pituitary tumors with almost complete penetrance (6, 7, 8). Analysis of mutant mouse strains for the Rb gene (Rb1) has underscored the importance of Rb for tumor suppression. In mammalian cells, proliferation control is primarily achieved in the G1-phase of the cell cycle. RB is phosphorylated in a cell cycle-dependent manner, and G1 cyclin/cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) complexes phosphorylate RB and RB-related pocket binding proteins. RB hyperphosphorylation promotes subsequent release of E2F transcription factors resulting in S phase cell cycle progression (9). Cdks integrate extracellular signals into the cell-cycle machinery (10, 11, 12). Cyclin/Cdk complexes are regulated by multiple mechanisms, including Cdk inhibitors (CdkI) (11). Cdk4(6) actions are regulated specifically by Ink4-type inhibitors (p16, p15, p18, p19), whereas Cdk2 is inhibited by Cip/Kip-type p21, p27, and p57 inhibitors (12, 13). By inhibiting cyclin/Cdk activity, CdkIs govern the G1-to-S transition. Perturbed G1 control is a critical step for cellular transformation and tumorigenesis (14, 15, 16).

Pituitary tumor transforming gene (Pttg) behaves as a mammalian securin homolog, facilitating sister chromatid separation during metaphase (17). Pttg exhibits oncogene properties because overexpression causes cell transformation, induces aneuploidy (18, 19), promotes tumor formation in nude mice, induces basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), and activates angiogenesis (20, 21). Pttg initially isolated from pituitary tumor cells, is overexpressed in pituitary tumors, and correlates with tumor invasiveness (22). Mice lacking Pttg are viable and fertile and exhibit testicular and splenic hypoplasia, thymic hyperplasia, and pancreatic ß-cell hypoplasia (23, 24), whereas pituitary-directed transgenic Pttg overexpression results in focal pituitary hyperplasia and adenoma formation (25)

To elucidate the PTTG role in tumorigenesis, we generated compound Rb x Pttg mutant mice to determine effects of deficient PTTG on tumor development in Rb+/– animals.


    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 REFERENCES
 
Pttg Deletion Results in Selective Decreased Organ Weight
Compound Rb+/–Pttg–/– mutant mice have lower body weights as compared with Rb+/–Pttg+/+ animals (P < 0.05), but similar to single Pttg–/–-deficient animals. At 4 months of age, before tumor development these animals weighed 32 g as compared with Rb+/–Pttg+/+ (41.3 ± 2.4 g, P < 0.05) littermates (Table 1Go). Pttg deficiency resulted in organ-specific decreased Rb+/– weights. Spleen (P < 0.01), pancreas (P < 0.05), testis (P < 0.05), and pituitary (P < 0.05) dry weights were lower in compound Rb+/–Pttg–/– mutant mice than in Rb+/–Pttg+/+ and wild-type (WT) mice and did not differ from single Pttg mutant animals. Similar organ-specific weight patterns were apparent when determined as a percentage of body mass (Table 1Go). Liver, brain, and heart weights did not differ between genotypes (data not shown).


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Table 1. Body and Organ Dry Weight in Male Mice at 4 Months

 
Pttg Deletion Results in Decreased Cell Proliferation in the Pretumorous Pituitary Gland
Pituitary weight of Pttg–/– animals was low (1.5 ± 0.07 mg, P < 0.01 vs. WT), and at 4 months, before tumor development, pituitary dry weight was lower in Rb+/–Pttg–/– than in Rb+/–Pttg+/+ mice (2.1 ± 0.8 vs. 5.0 ± 0.6 mg, P < 0.05) and did not differ from WT (2.8 ± 0.08 mg) (Table 1Go). Pituitary cell proliferation rate evaluated by bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation, and Ki67 immunolabeling was attenuated in mice deficient in PTTG. In young 1-month single mutant Rb+/+Pttg–/– mice, pituitary BrdU incorporation was lower (0.1 ± 0.04%) than in Rb+/–Pttg–/– and WT animals (0.76 ± 0.037% and 0.8 ± 0.09% respectively), and lower than in Rb+/–Pttg+/+ pituitary glands (1.2 ± 0.22%, P < 0.05) (Fig. 1AGo). These results were supported by finding low immunolabeled Ki67 expression in pituitary sections derived from Rb+/+Pttg–/– mice (2.7 ± 0.09% P <0.01). In double mutant mice, the Ki67 count did not differ from WT animals (13.2 ± 3.2% and 7.8 ± 1.3% respectively) but was markedly lower than in Rb+/–Pttg+/+ controls (26.1 ± 5.3%, P < 0.05) (Fig. 1BGo).



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Fig. 1. Pttg Deletion Results in Decreased Cell Proliferation in Pretumorous Pituitary

A, BrdU-positive pituitary cells in 4-wk-old Rb+/+Pttg+/+, Rb+/–Pttg+/+, Rb+/+Pttg–/– and Rb+/–Pttg–/– mice killed 24 h after BrdU injection. Each value represents mean percentage of positive cells ± SE (five to seven fields per section, three sections per animal, n = 3 animal/genotype analyzed). B, Ki67 labeling index in 4-wk-old Rb+/+Pttg+/+, Rb+/–Pttg+/+, Rb+/+Pttg–/– and Rb+/–Pttg–/– mice. Each value represents mean ± SE (10 fields/animal n = 3 animal/genotype analyzed). In A and B: **, P < 0.01 in Rb+/+Pttg–/– mice vs. three other genotypes.

 
Pttg Is Up-Regulated in Pretumorous Rb+/–Pttg+/+ Pituitary Gland
Pituitary Pttg mRNA levels were 2-fold higher (P < 0.05), and PTTG immunoreactivity was stronger in Rb+/–Pttg+/+ compared with WT pituitary gland (Fig. 2Go, A and B) when tested at 2–4 months of age.



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Fig. 2. Pttg Is Overexpressed in Pretumorous Rb+/– Pituitary Gland

A, Real-time PCR analysis of pituitary Pttg mRNA in 2- to 4-month-old pretumorous mice. Values are expressed as mean ± SE of triplicate measurements for each experimental group (n = 4–6 animals per group). *, P < 0.05 vs. WT. B, Pituitary immunohistochemistry for PTTG expression in WT and Rb+/–Pttg +/+ mice. Representative sections are shown.

 
Pttg Deletion Increases p21 Expression in Pretumorous Pituitary Gland
p21 Belongs to the Cip/Kip family of Cdk inhibitors that regulate cell cycle progression (12, 26, 27). p21 Restrains Cdk2 activity, and decreased phosphorylation of Cdks leads to decreased RB phosphorylation (11, 12, 26, 27), which consequently slows cell cycle progression. Young 2-month-old Rb+/+Pttg–/– and compound Rb+/–Pttg–/– mice exhibit increased pituitary p21 mRNA (Fig. 3AGo) and protein levels, whereas phosphorylated Cdk2 is reduced. Pituitary glands derived from Pttg-deficient animals demonstrate abundant p21 nuclear staining relative to WT and Rb+/–Pttg+/+ mice (Fig. 3BGo). Conversely, in transgenic mice overexpressing pituitary PTTG, p21 protein levels are very low, and phosphorylated Cdk2 is increased (Fig. 3CGo).



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Fig. 3. Pttg Deletion Increases Pituitary p21Expression in PTTG-Deficient Mice.

Two- to 4-month-old pretumorous Rb+/+Pttg+/+, Rb+/–Pttg+/+, Rb+/+Pttg–/– and Rb+/–Pttg–/– mice are analyzed. A, Real-time PCR of p21 mRNA. 1, Rb+/+Pttg+/+; 2, Rb+/–Pttg+/+; 3, Rb+/–Pttg–/–; 4, Rb+/–Pttg–/–]. Values are expressed as mean ± SE of triplicate measurements for each experimental group (n = 4–6 animals per group).*, P < 0.05; **, P < 0.01 vs. Rb+/+Pttg+/+. B, Immunohistochemistry for pituitary p21 expression. Green fluorescence indicates intranucleus localization of p21. Representative sections are shown. C, Western blot analysis of pituitary p21 and phosphoCdk2 protein levels.

 
PTTG Regulates p21 Expression in Murine Corticotroph Cells
To confirm that the observed decreased cell proliferation in PTTG-deficient mice is a result of Pttg deficiency, two short hairpin interfering RNAs (shRNAi) were specifically designed from residues 497–521 (shRNAi I) and from residues 394–413 (shRNAi II) of the mouse Pttg mRNA coding region. AtT20 corticotroph cells were transfected with shRNAi I or shRNAi II or mismatched control shRNAi. Both specific shRNAi constructs suppressed Pttg expression by approximately 90%, suggesting that most cells were successfully transfected. In cells where Pttg was silenced, p21 mRNA and protein levels were up-regulated, indicating an apparent inverse relationship between PTTG and p21expression (Fig. 4AGo). p21 Induction was associated with decreased levels of phosphorylated RB. Silencing Pttg in AtT20 cells with shRNAi I resulted in approximately 24% reduction in the number of BrdU-incorporated cells (cells in S-phase) as assessed by fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis (30.3 ± 2.1% cells transfected with mismatched shRNAi vs. 23.3 ± 3.1% cells transfected with specific Pttg shRNAi, P < 0.05). Transfection with shRNAi II resulted in approximately 20% reduction in the number of BrdU-incorporated cells (32.3±1.1% cells transfected with mismatched shRNAi vs. 26.3 ± 2.6% cell transfected with specific Pttg shRNAi, P < 0.05) (Fig. 4BGo). Thus, disrupted Pttg expression results in decreased murine pituitary cell proliferation rates.



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Fig. 4. PTTG Regulates Pituitary Corticotroph p21 Expression

A, Northern (upper panel) and Western (lower panel) blot analysis of AtT20 cells transfected with anti-Pttg shRNAi. After hybridization with Pttg probe (Northern) or anti-PTTG antibodies (Western) membranes were stripped and reblotted with p21 probe (Northern) or anti-p21 antibodies (Western). B, Western blot analysis of AtT20 cells transfected with anti-Pttg shRNAi and hybridized with antiphosphoRB antibodies. Lower panel, Decreased number of cells in S phase (% of control) after transfection with shRNAi. C, Suppression of murine p21 promoter activity by increasing doses of human Pttg in CHO cells; mt, mutant Pttg. *, P < 0.05 vs. basic vector.

 
The abundance of endogenous Pttg in experimental pituitary cell lines makes it difficult to accurately interpret tissue-specific effects of Pttg on p21 promoter activity. To explore the possibility that Pttg transcriptionally suppresses p21, Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells were therefore tested and transfected with murine a p21 promoter-luciferase reporter construct and cotransfected with increasing amounts of human WT Pttg. p21 Promoter activity was suppressed dose dependently by the Pttg expression plasmid but not by either control plasmids. Mutated human Pttg (28) partially suppressed p21 promoter activity relative to wt Pttg (33% in wt Pttg vs. 59% in mutant Pttg vs. 100% in basic vector; P < 0.05 between wt Pttg and basic vector) (Fig. 4CGo).

These results suggest that PTTG restrains p21 expression in pituitary corticotrophs, and Pttg deletion decreases pituitary cell proliferation in young Rb+/–Pttg–/– animals before visible tumor development by inducing pituitary p21.

Pttg Deletion Suppresses Pituitary Tumor Development in Rb+/– Mice
Rb heterozygous mice die mostly from pituitary tumors at 8–12 months of age depending on their genetic background (6, 29, 30, 31). Rb+/–Pttg+/+ mice developed pituitary tumors starting from 4 months of age, and by 13 months 25 of 29 (86%) Rb+/–Pttg+/+ mice had pituitary tumors. The appearance of pituitary tumors was delayed in Rb+/–Pttg–/– mice; of 57 doubly mutant mice, only 20% harbored tumors at 13 months, and by 17 months 30% had tumors. These adenomas did not differ morphologically from Rb+/– tumors. In WT mice, spontaneous pituitary tumors were observed in four of 28 animals (14%) starting at 9 months of age. Of 23 Rb+/+Pttg–/– mice, three animals (13%) harbored pituitary tumors at 16 months. Whereas Rb+/– mice do not survive more than 13 months, compound Rb+/–Pttg–/– animals have now survived for more than 18 months (Fig. 5AGo). Kaplan-Meier survival analysis (log-rank test) of the time of death with evidence of pituitary tumor in the different genotypes showed significant differences between Rb+/–Pttg–/–and Rb+/–Pttg+/+ (P < 0.01), between Rb+/–Pttg–/– and Rb+/+Pttg–/– (P < 0.05), and between Rb+/–Pttg+/+ and Rb+/+Pttg–/– mice (P < 0.01).



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Fig. 5. Pttg Deletion Suppresses Pituitary Tumor Development in Rb+/– Mice

A, Development of pituitary tumors in Rb+/+Pttg+/+, Rb+/–Pttg+/+, Rb+/+Pttg–/– and Rb+/–Pttg–/– mice over time, n = total number of animals killed. B, Southern-based Rb LOH analysis of DNA extracted from either tumor or tail tissue. mut, Mutant, T1, T3, T5, tissue derived from Rb+/–Pttg–/– pituitary tumors; N1, N2-tail tissue from WT mice.

 
Consistent with results previously shown for Rb+/– tumors (32), Rb loss of heterozygosity (LOH) was observed in five of seven compound tumors analyzed, indicating that loss of the single Rb allele in Rb+/–Pttg–/– animals is present in these tumors (Fig. 5BGo).


    DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 REFERENCES
 
The pathogenesis of pituitary neoplasms has been extensively studied to identify oncogene or growth factor mutations, or signaling defects (33, 34). Pttg originally isolated from experimental pituitary tumor cells, is expressed in several malignancies (21), is associated with increased tumor invasiveness of pituitary adenomas (22), epithelial neoplasias (35), and colorectal carcinomas (22), and in the pituitary is especially induced by estrogen (36). Pttg is also a component of a 17-gene expression signature marker of metastatic potential for human tumors (37). Because mice heterozygous for Rb show enhanced predisposition to pituitary and thyroid tumors (8, 29, 31), Rb+/–Pttg–/– compound mutant mice were employed to determine the impact of PTTG loss on development and progression of pituitary tumors in Rb-deficient animals.

Pituitary Pttg mRNA and protein levels were induced in pretumorous Rb+/– mice. Pttg deletion leads to slowing of pituitary cell proliferation and induction of the Cdk inhibitor, p21, in young pretumorous pituitary glands, and in mouse AtT20 corticotroph cells. Conversely, mice with pituitary directed Pttg overexpression exhibit very low pituitary p21 levels. Compound mice with deleted Pttg develop pituitary tumors with markedly lower frequency than Rb heterozygous animals. High p21 levels likely restrain tumor initiation and progression in Pttg-deficient compound animals. The results suggest that pituitary cell proliferation capacity is required for early high penetrance of pituitary tumor formation in Rb heterozygous mice.

Pretumorous compound Rb+/–Pttg–/– animals had lower selective organ weights consistent with splenic, testicular, and pancreatic ß-cell hypoplasia observed in Pttg–/– mice (23, 24), indicating the requirement for PTTG in postdevelopment growth control of selected cell types. Hypoplastic organs appeared developmentally normal with appropriate differentiated gene expression; although the testes are hypoplastic, males are fertile (23). Pttg-disrupted MEF or pancreatic ß-cells do not exhibit higher rates of apoptosis (23, 24). The relation between PTTG and apoptosis is not clear. PTTG overexpression caused p53-dependent and p53-independent apoptosis (18), and p53 suppresses Pttg promoter activity in response to DNA damage (38). Whereas pituitary weights were lower in PTTG-deficient mice, apoptosis rates were extremely low in young pretumorous pituitary glands, and no differences in apoptotic rates were noted between genotypes as assessed by deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick end-labeling assay (data not shown).

Low pituitary and other selected organ weights in animals lacking PTTG might result from a proliferation defect. Slow pituitary cell proliferation is evident by low pituitary BrdU incorporation as well as low immunolabeling with Ki67. Ki67 is expressed during both G1 and S phases of proliferation, but not in quiescent cells (39). Additional support for a proliferative defect was derived from experiments showing that Pttg suppression in AtT20 cells by shRNAi decreased the percentage of cells in S-phase. Thus, PTTG deletion slows pituitary cell proliferation, whereas up-regulated Pttg mRNA and protein levels observed in the pretumorous Rb+/–Pttg+/+ pituitary gland may promote cell cycle entry.

Mechanisms underlying organ-specific decreased Pttg–/– cell proliferation are not clear. In humans, two additional Pttg homologs have been identified (40): the index Pttg, and homologous Pttg2 and Pttg3. Although Pttg is most abundantly expressed in normal testes, Pttg2 is preferentially expressed in spleen, liver, heart, and pituitary, and Pttg3 in the kidney and prostate. PTTG may be important for neuroendocrine cell proliferation, whereas in other tissues PTTG requirement could be less essential, or Pttg function may be substituted by other Pttg family members. Similarly, acute RB loss in quiescent pituitary cells is compensated by Rb-related associated pocket binding protein p107 (41).

Negative regulation of cell cycle progression, particularly during development, could depend on cell-specific combinations of Cdk inhibitors (42). No differences in the expression of Cdk inhibitors p27 and p18 were found between genotypes (data not shown). Therefore, a mechanism for decreased pituitary cell proliferation in mice lacking PTTG could be induced specifically by pituitary p21 expression. Cell proliferation control is primarily achieved in G1, when RB and p21 are critical components (26). Sequential activation of cyclin/Cdk complexes regulates progression through the cell cycle. In vitro, p21 has a high affinity for cyclin E/Cdk2 complexes and 95% of active Cdk2 in normal fibroblasts is associated with p21 (27, 43). A recent model describes G1 progression as occurring in two discrete stages controlled by Cdk4(6) under RB regulation and Cdk2 under p21 regulation. Inhibition of either stage attenuates cell progression (26). Rb+/–p21–/– mice exhibit alteration of both stages and have accelerated pituitary tumor development compared with Rb heterozygous animals (26). In our experiments, induced p21 leads to a decline in phosphorylated Cdk2 levels that likely affect pituitary cell proliferation. These results indicate that p21 function limits tumor cell growth and that the delay in tumor progression observed in compound Rb+/–Pttg–/– animals might arise as a consequence of pituitary p21 overexpression. Mutually exclusive patterns of Ki67 and p21 occur in gastrointestinal epithelium with p21 apparently restraining epithelial proliferation (39). Similarly, our data showing high p21 and low Ki67 expression suggest a restraining role for p21 in pituitary cell proliferation in the young PTTG-deficient pituitary gland.

Increased p21 expression in Rb+/+Pttg–/– and Rb+/–Pttg–/– animals is probably due to Pttg ablation. Our in vitro experiments demonstrate that silencing Pttg in AtT20 mouse corticotrophs by shRNAi leads to marked p21 gene and protein induction. High p21, in turn, is associated with decreased RB phosphorylation with subsequent diminished S-phase cell number. PTTG might also directly affect the p21 promoter as PTTG overexpression dose-dependently decreased p21 promoter activity.

An alternative explanation of our results would be that PTTG-derived mitotic alteration could activate checkpoint signals, leading to p53 stimulation and consequent p21 induction (39, 44, 45). Indeed, PTTG has been shown to interact with p53 and inhibit its transcriptional ability after DNA damage (46). In this and previous (23, 24) studies, however, we did not observe p53-dependent increased pituitary apoptosis in PTTG-deficient mice. In undamaged cells, p21 may negatively control proliferation in a p53-independent manner (39). Thus, our results indicate that PTTG deficiency has significant consequences for cell proliferation and imply that PTTG regulation of the pituitary cells involves p21-dependent mechanisms.

Striking similarities are apparent between Pttg–/– and Cdk4-deficient mice. Cdk4–/– animals have hypoplastic pituitary glands and develop diabetes mellitus associated with pancreatic islet degeneration (47). At least in part, Cdk4 controls S-phase transition via negative regulation of p27, another Cdk inhibitor (42, 48). PTTG negatively regulates p21, and similar to Cdk4 promotes cell cycle entry. Cooperation of p27 and p21 appears critical for tissue-specific withdrawal from the cell cycle (42).

High p21 levels likely restrain tumor formation and progression in compound double mutant mice. In this study, we show that by 12 months pituitary tumors were evident in 86% of Rb+/–Pttg+/+ mice. Pttg absence suppresses and delays progression of Rb-related tumors resulting in extended murine life span. Thus, whereas Rb+/–Pttg+/+ mice invariably die by 13 months, only 30% of Rb+/–Pttg–/– develop tumors by 18 months.

Both humans and mice harboring a germ line Rb mutation develop tumors with almost complete penetrance, and tumor development is accompanied by tumor loss of the WT allele (30, 32, 49). In the absence of PTTG, the proportion of individual cells that eliminate the remaining WT allele of Rb during tumor development could be lower. However, as five of seven tumors derived from Rb+/–Pttg–/– compound mice do in fact exhibit Rb LOH, it is unlikely that PTTG regulates the frequency of loss of the remaining Rb allele in these tumors. However, we cannot exclude the effect of PTTG as a securin protein on chromatin exchange, leading to accelerated LOH and tumor formation. Aneuploidy is a ubiquitous feature of human solid tumors, causes genetic instability, and also promotes further aneuploidy. PTTG is a mammalian securin, localizes in the interphase nucleus, and mitotic spindles and binds to and inhibits separin, which cleaves cohesin binding of sister chromatids (17). At the end of metaphase, PTTG is degraded, allowing equal separation of sister chromatids. PTTG overexpression induces aneuploidy by inhibiting equal chromatid segregation (19) and increasing the number of aneuploid cells leading to genomic instability. Paradoxically, abnormal nuclei, increased aneuploidy and premature centromere division are also observed in fibroblasts derived from Pttg–/– mice (23). Therefore, both Pttg excess as observed in tumors, and Pttg loss lead to cell cycle disruption and aneuploidy. These features point to Pttg as a caretaker gene ensuring genomic stability (50, 51). It is not yet apparent whether aneuploidy is a contributing cause or secondary consequence of cell transformation (51). Chromosamal instability can also arise from defects in cell cycle transformation (52). Despite increased aneuploidy, the incidence of pituitary tumors in Pttg-null mice are notably lower than in Rb heterozygous animals.

Our results are in contrast with an earlier in vitro study showing that PTTG overexpression induced growth arrest in human lung cancer cells by a p21-dependent mechanism (53). However, low pituitary weight, decreased cell proliferation, induction of pituitary p21 in PTTG-deficient mice, very low p21 protein levels in mice with pituitary-directed PTTG-overexpression, high levels of PTTG in pretumorous pituitary glands of Rb-heterozygous mice and marked decrease in tumor incidence in Rb+/– mice with Pttg deletion, all observed in our study indicate that in vivo PTTG promotes the pituitary cell cycle via p21 arrest and thus may induce or potentiate pituitary tumor formation. The contrasting results could be explained by strong tissue-specific properties of p21 (for example, RB stimulates p21 promoter in epithelial cells, but not in fibroblasts) (54). Thus the effect of PTTG-deficiency on p21 overexpression and cell cycle arrest may also be pituitary specific. The extent to which such tissue specificity underlies the relationship between PTTG and p21 requires further study.

In summary, the results show that placing Rb+/– mice into a Pttg-deficient background reduces and delays the progression of pituitary tumors. Absent PTTG allows expression of p21. The observed results, taken together with the in vivo finding that pituitary-directed transgenic Pttg overexpression causes focal hyperplasia (25), suggest that overexpressed pituitary PTTG in Rb+/– mice influences tumor initiation and progression by enhancing cell proliferation. We conclude that pituitary hypoplasia is an important determinant for protection against pituitary tumor formation.


    MATERIALS AND METHODS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 REFERENCES
 
Animals
Experiments were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee. Pttg–/– mice were generated on a mixed C57BL/6x129/Sv genetic background and back-crossed to a C57BL/6 parental genotype. Rb+/– mice on a 129/Sv genetic background were purchased from The Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME). Compound Rb+/–Pttg–/– mice were bred by crossing Rb+/–Pttg+/– females and Rb+/–Pttg+/– males. Four genotypes were obtained from the same breeding: Rb+/–Pttg–/–, Rb+/–Pttg+/+, Rb+/+ Pttg–/–, and Rb+/+Pttg+/+ (WT). Animals were genotyped by PCR for Pttg (23) and Rb loci as described (6). Transgenic mice with {alpha}GSU promoter driving PTTG expression (25) were cross-bred with Rb+/– animals.

Anatomic and Histological Analysis
Animals were killed and subjected to necropsy at the first indication of morbidity (weight loss, dehydration, or ataxia). Others were killed as age-matched controls. For histological analyses, tissues were fixed, paraffin embedded, and sections stained with hematoxylin-eosin and periodic acid-Schiff.

Immunohistochemistry
The streptavidin-biotin-peroxidase complex technique was used with polyclonal PTTG antibodies (rabbit antihuman; Zymed, San Francisco, CA) (55), and for p21 detection goat antimouse p21 polyclonal antibodies conjugated with Alexa 488 fluorescent dye was used (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR). Antigen retrieval was performed by heating; control reactions lacked primary antibodies or were stained with blocking antibodies.

BrdU and Ki67 Labeling
One-month-old mice were injected with BrdU (50 µg/g body weight; Sigma, St Louis, MO) and killed 24 h later. Pituitary sections were stained for BrdU (mouse anti-BrdU antibody, Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ), counterstained with hematoxylin, and positive cells detected with ABC peroxidase system (Vector, Burlingame, CA). Five to seven randomly chosen visual fields/per section were counted, and three sections per animal derived from three animals of each genotype were analyzed.

Ki67 labeling index (MIB-1 antibody; Immunotech, Westbrook, MN) was determined based on the number of positively stained nuclei divided by the total number of nuclei counted. Ten fields containing approximately 100 cells were counted from each animal, and three animals from each genotype were analyzed.

LOH
Rb loss was determined by Southern blotting of DNA prepared from tumor tissues derived from either Rb+/–Pttg+/+ or Rb+/–Pttg–/– animals. DNA was digested with Pst1/Kpn1, and hybridized with a probe spanning exon 3 of the Rb locus (generous gift of Dr. T. Jacks, MIT, Cambridge, UK).

Quantitative PCR
Quantitative real-time PCR was performed (56) to detect p21 and Pttg mRNA expression. The following specific primers were used: p21 forward 5'-CAGTACTTCCTCTGCCCTGC-3', p21 reverse 5'-AATCTGTCAGGCTGGTCTGC-3'. Pttg forward 5'-CGTCCTCAATGCCAATATCC-3', reverse 5'-TCAACCCATCCTTAGATGCC-3'; 18S forward 5'-AAACGGCTACCACATCCAAG-3', reverse 5'-CCTCCAATGGATCCTGGTTA-3'. Relative quantification of each gene in experimental samples was determined from the corresponding standard curve, normalized to 18S, and expressed as arbitrary units.

shRNAi
For suppression of cellular Pttg expression, two shRNAis that specifically targeted Pttg mRNA were designed according to the manufacturer’s protocol (Epicentra, Madison, WI). The sense sequence of shRNAi I spanning residues 497–521 of mouse Pttg coding region was 5'-GGACAGTCAACAGAGTTGCCGAAAC-3'. The sense sequence of shRNAi II spanning residues 394–413 was 5'-CTAGTGTCAAGGCCTTAGATC-3'. AtT20 murine corticotroph cells (American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA) were transfected with 100 nM Pttg shRNAi or mismatched shRNA using Oligofectamine (Invitrogen, Gaithersburg, MD), and cellular expression analyzed 24 h later.

Northern and Western Blot Analysis
Northern analysis of pituitary Pttg and p21 expression was performed as described (56). Membrane was hybridized with 32P-labeled fragment of murine Pttg (23), stripped and rehybridized with a murine p21 fragment (obtained by PCR, GenBank accession no. U24173).

For Western blot, pituitaries or cells were processed according to manufacturer’s instruction (Immunoprecipitation Kit, Roche Diagnostics, Germany). Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE, electroblotted onto Millipore membranes (Millipore, MA), and incubated with anti-PTTG (Zymed, San Francisco, CA) or anti-p21, p18, p27 (Santa Cruz, CA) or antiphosphoCdk2 (Thr160) and -phosphorRB (Ser807/811) (Cell Signaling Technology, Beverly, MA) antibodies overnight, and then with corresponding secondary antibodies. Immunoreactive bands were detected by ECL immunodetection system.

Cell Proliferation Assay
Asynchronized AtT20 cells were pulsed with 10 µM BrdU (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) in PBS for 10 min at 37 C. Cells were washed three times with 1% BSA in PBS, harvested, fixed in 75% ethanol, and analyzed by FACScan (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, CA). The results depict the mean of three independent experiments ± SE.

Transfection and Luciferase Assay
Hamster ovarian carcinoma cells (CHO, ATCC) were plated in six-well plates 12 h before transient transfection in triplicate with 0.225 µg murine p21 promoter-luciferase reporter construct in pGL 3 (kindly provided by Dr. J. Pelling, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS) and cotransfected with increasing amounts of WT or mutated human Pttg in pCI-neo. As a control, cells were cotransfected with reporter and expression vectors and each sample was cotransfected with LacZ control plasmid (Promega, San Louis Obispo, CA). 0.5 µg cDNA (including 0.05 µg LacZ) was transfected using Effectin (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA). Total DNA was kept constant by adding the required amount of pGL 3. Cells were harvested 24 h after transfection, assayed for luciferase activity, results were normalized to ß-galactosidase activity and represent the average of three independent transfections ± SE. Luciferase activity in cells cotransfected with p21 and pGL3 basic vector is represented as 100%.

Statistical Analysis
Comparisons of pituitary tumor incidences in the respective genotypes were made by Kaplan-Meier survival analysis (log-rank test). Body and organ weights, quantitative PCR, BrdU-and Ki67 labeling indices were analyzed using ANOVA followed by nonparametric t test (Mann-Whitney) or Student’s t test with a probability of P < 0.05 considered significant.


    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We thank Fabio Rotondo, Anastasia Kariagina, Ph.D., and Dana Alon for technical assistance, and Dr. I. Donangelo for providing Rb+/+ {alpha}GSU.Pttg mice


    FOOTNOTES
 
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant CA 75979 (to S.M.) and The Doris Factor Molecular Endocrinology Laboratory.

First Published Online May 26, 2005

Abbreviations: bFGF, Basic fibroblast growth factor; BrdU, bromodeoxyuridine; Cdk, cyclin-dependent kinase; CdkI, inhibitors; CHO, Chinese hamster ovary; LOH, loss of heterozygosity; Pttg, pituitary tumor transforming gene; Rb, retinoblastoma; shRNAi, short hairpin interfering RNA; WT, wild type.

Received for publication March 23, 2005. Accepted for publication May 16, 2005.


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