|
- Oncogene-induced transcriptional patterns in established cell lines as a model for in vitro analysis of tumor biology
- Francisco de Paula Careta1, Bruno Marcos Verbeno Azevedo1, Beatriz Alves Vianna1,
- Greiciane Gaburro Paneto2, Irineu Iester Degasperi3, Marcos do Carmo Oyama1,
- Valéria Fagundes1, Ângela Maria Spagnol Perrone1 and Iúri Drumond Louro1
- 1Departamento de Ciências Biológicas, Centro de Ciências Humanas e Naturais,
- Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo,Vitória, ES, Brasil
- 2Departamento de Farmácia e Bioquímica, Centro Biomédico,
- Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, Vitória, ES, Brasil
- 3UNIFERT, Centro Avançado de Reprodução Humana, Hospital Santa Mônica,
- Vila Velha, ES, Brasil
- Corresponding author: I.D. Louro
- E-mail: iurilouro@yahoo.com
- Genet. Mol. Res. 3 (3): 410-420 (2004)
- Received February 25, 2004
- Accepted September 2, 2004
- Published September 30, 2004
ABSTRACT. Established cell lines have long been used for in vitro studies of tumor biology, enabling investigators to control growth conditions and to draw important conclusions about the oncogenic microenvironment. However, gene expression behavior in cultured cells may not always reflect the actual in vivo scenario, and analysis derived from such experiments should take into consideration the existing differences between the two environments. We used suppression subtractive hybridization to study transcriptional changes elicited after oncogene transformation and cell line establishment. We found that transcriptional changes elicited in cultured cell lines are in fact representative of late events, and they do not occur early after oncogene transfection or activation. We also determined that a fraction of the transcriptional changes is oncogene specific, whereas other changes are shared between two or more different oncogenes.
Key words: Tumor biology, Transcriptional patterns, Transformation, Oncogene
|