Ablation of the Retinoblastoma gene family deregulates G1 control causing immortalization and increased cell turnover under growth-restricting conditions

  1. Jan-Hermen Dannenberg,
  2. Agnes van Rossum,
  3. Leontine Schuijff, and
  4. Hein te Riele1
  1. The Netherlands Cancer Institute, Division of Molecular Biology, 1066 CX Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

The retinoblastoma suppressor pRB belongs to the family of so-called pocket proteins, which also includes p107 and p130. These proteins may functionally overlap in cell cycle control and tumor suppression. We have generated an isogenic set of embryonic stem (ES) cell lines carrying single or compound loss-of-function mutations in theRb gene family, including a cell line completely devoid of all three pocket proteins. None of the knockout combinations affected the growth characteristics of ES cells; however, concomitant ablation of all three pocket proteins strongly impaired their differentiation capacity. For the generated genotypes, primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) also were obtained. While inactivation ofRb alone did not alleviate the senescence response of MEFs, pRB/p107-deficient MEFs, after having adapted to in vitro culturing, continued to proliferate at modest rate. Additional ablation of p130 rendered MEFs completely insensitive to senescence-inducing signals and strongly increased their proliferation rate. Although triple-knockout MEFs retained anchorage dependence, they lacked proper G1control and showed increased cell turnover under growth-inhibiting conditions.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • 1 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL hriele{at}nki.nl; FAX 31-20-512-2086.

  • Article and publication are at www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.847700.

    • Received September 1, 2000.
    • Accepted October 25, 2000.
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