|  |  | THYMOMAS AND TELOMERASE TELOMERASE ACTIVITY IN THYMOMAS AND MAMMARY GLAND
          ADENOCARCINOMAS INDUCED BY POLYOMA VIRUS IN AKR MICE* JAVIER OTERO, NORBERTO
          SANJUAN Laboratorio de Patología
          Experimental, Departamento de Microbiología, Facultad de Medicina,
          Universidad de Buenos Aires * Partially presented in the Annual Meeting of Sociedad Argentina
          de Investigación Clínica, Mar del Plata, November, 1997 Key words: telomerase, Polyoma, TRAP assay, thymoma, mammary
          gland adenocarcinoma Abstract  Telomerase
          is an enzyme that stabilizes telomere length in transformed cells and
          tumors. Its role in tumor development is far from clear. In this
          paper, a new experimental model to study telomerase activity during
          tumorigenesis is presented. After infection with Polyoma virus, AKR
          mice developed thymomas and mammary gland adenocarcinomas. Polyoma
          antigens were observed by the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique on
          tissue sections, and by Western blot on tumor extracts. The TRAP assay
          was performed to detect telomerase activity. It was not present in
          normal mammary gland, but it was positive in mammary gland
          adenocarcinomas. A different pattern was seen in thymic tissues:
          normal thymus had higher telomerase activity than thymomas. The
          incubation of thymoma extracts with normal thymus extracts decreased
          telomerase activity in the latter. These results demonstrate two
          different patterns of telomerase activity in tumors induced by Polyoma
          virus, and suggest the presence of telomerase inhibitory factors in
          thymomas. Resumen  Actividad
          telomerasa en timomas y adenocarcinomas de mama inducidos por el virus
          Polioma en ratones AKR. La telomerasa es una enzima que estabiliza la
          longitud de los telómeros en células transformadas y en tumores. Su
          función en el desarrollo neoplásico no es clara. En este trabajo se
          presenta un nuevo modelo experimental para estudiar la actividad
          telomerasa durante la tumorigénesis. Se inocularon ratones AKR con
          virus Polioma, los cuales desarrollaron timomas y adenocarcinomas de
          mama. Los antígenos de Polioma fueron detectados en cortes
          histológicos por peroxidasa-antiperoxidasa, y en extractos tumorales
          por Western blot. Para estudiar la actividad telomerasa se empleó el
          ensayo TRAP. No se detectó actividad telomerasa en tejido mamario
          normal, pero fue positiva en adenocarcinomas de mama. Por el
          contrario, el timo normal tuvo mayor actividad telomerasa que los
          timomas. La incubación de extractos de timomas con extractos de timo
          normal produjo una disminución de la actividad telomerasa en estos
          últimos. Estos resultados demuestran dos tipos distintos de actividad
          telomerasa en tumores producidos por virus Polioma, y sugieren la
          existencia de inhibidores de la telomerasa en los timomas.   Postal address: Dr. Norberto Sanjuan, Departamento de
          Microbiología, Facultad de Medicina, Paraguay 2155, 1121 Buenos
          Aires, ArgentinaFax: 54-1-508-3705; E-mail: patoexpe@fmed.uba.ar
 Received: 12-VIII-1998 Accepted: 25-VIII-1998   Telomeres are structures located at the ends of eukaryotic
          chromosomes. They are composed of short repeated DNA sequences rich in
          G residues on one strand. Humans, mice and other mammals, contain
          TTAGGG repeats arranged in tandem, running 5' to 3'. The number of
          repeats varies in different species: for example, telomeres of the
          laboratory mouse Mus musculus are larger than the human telomeres.It is acknowledged that telomeres both stabilize chromosome ends and
          are involved in the regulation of cell replication timing, chromosome
          positioning in the nucleus, and other important functions that control
          cell division1.
 In every normal somatic cell division, 50-200 nucleotides of telomeric
          sequence become lost2. It has been argued that the progressive
          shortening of telomeres is a “mitotic clock” that finally conduces
          normal cells to replicative senescence3. Immortal cells, however, do
          not present any reduction of telomeric DNA tandem repeats. This
          strongly indicates that the maintenance of telome-re length is crucial
          for the cell to elude senescence and proliferate4. Telomeres are
          seemingly directly invol- ved in cellular aging and in the
          pathogenesis of can- cer.
 Telomerase is an enzyme that either maintains or increases the length
          of telomeres. It is a ribonucleoprotein in which the RNA component is
          a template for the synthesis of telomeric DNA repeats onto chromosomal
          ends1. Telomerase activity is detected in most tumors and stem cells,
          but is usually absent in normal tissues5. It can therefore be infered
          that telomerase may play some role in tumor production, and is
          currently considered a target of anti-tumoral therapy.
 Several experimental approaches have been based on this hypothesis.
          For example, in vitro transformation of human B lymphocytes by
          Epstein-Barr virus has been associated with telomerase activity6,
          mouse mammary tumor virus long terminal repeat-driven Wnt-1
          proto-oncogene expression in mammary tissue of transgenic mice
          produces mammary tumors with high levels of telomerase7, and HPV-16 E6
          transduction of human keratinocytes and mammary epithelial cells
          activates telomerase8.
 Nevertheless, in vitro cell transformation does not correlate
          necessarily with the in vivo mechanisms of tumor production. The
          construction of transgenic mice or the transduction of cells with
          viral oncogenes can provide pertinent information on the relationship
          between oncogene expression and telomerase activity, but these systems
          are ultimately artificial.
 The purpose of this paper is to present a new experimental model, in
          which telomerase activity is studied in tumors induced by Polyoma
          virus. The use of an infecting oncogenic virus permits highly
          reproducible results. Moreover, Polyoma is a natural virus of mice,
          and it has the property of infecting and of producing tumors in the
          same animal9, 10, thus enabling a step by step study of tumorigenesis.
 The PTA strain of Polyoma virus was used in every experiment. This
          strain, highly tumorigenic in mice, was obtained as a kind gift from
          Dr. Thomas L. Benjamin (Harvard Medical School, Boston, U.S.A.). Virus
          stocks were produced in primary cultures of specific-pathogen-free
          Balb/c mice kidney epithelial cells (BMK). When cytopathic effect was
          completed, cultures were frozen and thawed 3 times and centrifuged at
          400 g during 20 minutes. The supernatant was titrated by the
          plaque-forming units method (pfu)11. Virus stock was aliquoted, and
          maintained at -70°C until used.
 Newborn (less than 48 hs of life) AKR mice obtained from the mouse
          colony of the Academia Nacional de Medicina, Buenos Aires, were
          injected subcutaneously with 105 pfu of virus. Other mice were
          injected with the supernatants of uninfected BMK cells, and a third
          group was kept without any inoculation to evaluate the eventual
          incidence of spontaneous tumors. Each experimental group was composed
          of 20 animals, maintained 5 to a box, and fed on pellets ad libitum.
          Twice a week mice were observed clinically for the purpose of
          detecting tumors.
 Between 60 and 90 days pi, 20/20 mice infected with PTA showed
          progressive dyspnea, and were sacrificed with an excess of ether
          anesthesia. In all 20 mice, necropsies showed the presence of tumors
          in the superior mediastinum. Tumors were large, soft and pink,
          occupying most of the thoracic cavity. Two of the mice also had
          subcutaneous nodules. Neither mock-infected nor untreated mice
          developed any tumors.
 Tissues were immediately fixed in Bouin’s fluid, and embedded in
          paraffin. Hematoxilin-Eosin, Gomori’s silver impregnation, Masson’s
          trichromic, and P.A. Schiff stains were used for histologic tumor
          characterization.
 Mediastinal tumors were thymomas, and subcuta-neous neoplasms were
          well differentiated intraductal mammary gland adenocarcinomas (Fig.
          1). Polyoma structural antigens were detected in all tumors using, on
          tissue sections, the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) technique
          counterstained with Hematoxilin. The primary antiserum was a
          polyclonal one against Polyoma, prepared in rabbit. Intense positive
          labeling was observed in the nuclei of scattered tumor cells. Thymic
          tissue of uninfected mice was used as negative control for PAP
          technique, and tumors treated with normal rabbit serum as primary
          antibody were employed for internal control. Polyoma antigens were not
          detected in any control. The presence of Polyoma antigens in tumors
          was also comfirmed by SDS-Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis and
          Western blot (Fig. 1).
 Immediately after the mice were sacrificed, suitable samples of tumor
          and of normal tissues were taken and frozen in liquid nitrogen, then
          kept at -70 °C until telomerase detection was performed. Telomerase
          activity was studied by the TRAP assay, developed by Kim et al.5, and
          modified by Blasco et al12. Briefly, tissue were thawed, washed with
          Ice-Cold-Wash Buffer (10 mM HEPES-KOH pH 7.5; 1.5 mM Mg2Cl; 10 mM KCl;
          1 mM dithiothreitol), then Dounce homogeneized with Ice-Cold-Lysis
          Buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5; 1 mM Mg2Cl; 1 mM EGTA; 5 mM
          b-mercaptoethanol; 0.1 mM phenyl-methylsulfonyl fluoride; 0.5% w/v
          CHAPS; 10% v/v glycerol) and incubated on ice for 30 minutes. The
          cellular extract obtained was centrifuged at 16.000 Xg, 30 minutes at
          4°C, and supernatants were aliquoted and kept at -70°C. Protein
          concentration was determined by the Bradford method (Biorad). An
          extension reaction was done using 3 different total protein
          concentrations (1 µg, 0.1 µg and 0.01 µg) of each sample to measure
          telomerase activity. The final concentration of the components in the
          telomerase extention reaction was: 50 mM Tris-Acetate pH 8.5; 1 mM
          spermidine; 5 mM b-mercaptoethanol; 3 mM Mg2Cl; 50 mM potassium
          acetate; 1 mM EGTA, 0.5 µg of TS oligonucleotide (5'
          AATCCGTCGAGCAGAGTT3'); 2 mM each of dTTP, dGTP and dATP. Every
          reaction was done in a final volume of 40 µl and incubated 30 minutes
          at 30°C. Extracts of testes (where telomerase activity is normally
          present in mice) were used for telomerase exten- sion as positive
          control. Since telomerase has a RNA component, RNAse and heating at
          70°C 10 mi- nutes were employed on the testes extract for internal
          control in every experiment. After the extension reac-tion, a PCR
          amplification of every sample was do- ne using the TS primer already
          described, and the CX primer designed as a telomeric sequence (3'
          AATCCCATTCCCATTCCCCATTCCC5'). The reaction was composed of 10 µg of
          the extension product in 50 µl of TRAP buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.3;
          1.5 mM Mg2Cl; 63 mM KCl; 0.005% Tween 20; 1 mM EGTA; 50 µM of all
          four dNTPs; 0.1 µg of TS oligonucleotide, 0.1 µg of CX primer; 0.1
          mg/ml BSA; 5 µCi of 32P dGTP with a specific activity of 800 Ci/mM; 5
          units of Taq polimerase). PCR conditions were 94°C 30 seconds, 50°C
          30 seconds, 72°C 90 seconds, 30 cycles. Hot start conditions were
          used in order to avoid primer dimerization. 5 µl of every reaction
          were analyzed in 12% acrylamide-bisacrylamide- 7 M urea gels, and
          later detected by autoradiography.
 Results showed no telomerase activity in normal mammary gland tissue,
          and a positive reaction in mammary gland adenocarcinomas (Fig. 2). The
          intensity of telomerase activity correlated with the protein
          con-centration used in every reaction. Protein concentration has been
          reported to be critical for telomerase detection and quantitation in
          mouse tissues7. Telomerase activity showed a completely different
          pattern in the thymic tissue than in mammary gland. Normal thymus had
          a strong telomerase activity in the three protein dilutions, while
          thymomas showed a marked reduction in telomerase activity as compared
          to the normal thymus (Fig. 2). This result was consistently observed,
          after repeating 3 times telomerase detection in every single sample.
 The fact that mammary gland adenocarcinomas have higher telomerase
          activity than normal mammary tissue is in agreement with the idea that
          telomerase is involved in the progression of tumor development.
          However, the detection of lesser telomerase activity in thymomas than
          in normal thymus was unexpected.
 This could be explained by different hypotheses. Thymus is an organ
          with stem cells and a strong cellular differentiation. Even though
          thymomas are tumors, they are composed of well differentiated
          epithelial cells, that could eventually have less telomerase activity
          than the normal, highly proliferative thymic cells. Another hypothesis
          is that thymomas produce an inhibitory factor that eventually
          interferes with telomerase activity. To test this possibility,
          different concentrations of thymoma extracts were added to normal
          thymus extracts, then telomerase reaction was carried out. The
          consequence was a decrease in telomerase activity in the normal thymus
          extract, observed in 3 independent experiments (Fig. 2). In these 3
          experiments, telomerase activity detection was done simultaneously in
          normal thymus extracts and on thymoma extracts, using the same
          chemicals and experimental conditions. It has been described that
          non-especific inhibitors of the PCR step can be present in some mouse
          tissues7, 12. In order to check if these extracts can nonspecifically
          inhibit the telomerase reaction at the PCR amplification step, thymoma
          extracts were added to a control PCR reaction that is known to amplify
          Human Immunodeficiency Virus DNA. No inhibition was observed, and
          there was no difference between the PCR amplification products with or
          without thymoma extract (data non shown). These experiments suggest
          that the lesser telomerase activity observed in normal thymus extracts
          after being mixed with thymoma extracts occurs in the extension phase
          of telomerase reaction.
 The results reported here demonstrate that telomerase is present in
          tumors produced by Polyoma virus in mice. They also show that
          telomerase activity is both qualitatively and quantitatively different
          in tumors produced by this DNA-oncogenic virus in 2 different organs
          in the same animal, and equally suggest that telomerase-inhibitory
          factors could exist in some tumors.
 Recently, It has been demonstrated that transfection of telomerase
          catalytic subunit into normal (telomerase-negative) human cells
          produces elongation of telomeres and active cell division, but no cell
          transformation13. This suggests that telomerase expression per se is
          not oncogenic. Moreover, an alternative mechanism of telomere
          lengthening (ATL) without telomerase activity has been described14.
          These results have been observed in cell cultures, albeit not in
          tumors. In many reports, telomerase activity has been consistently
          detected in human5 and murine15 tumors, supporting the hypothesis
          that, somehow, telomerase expression is involved in the development of
          cancer. Currently, the pathway used by Polyoma to interact with
          telomerase activity is unknown. It is unclear whether this phenomenon
          is an early event in tumorigenesis or a late one. The experimental
          model described here will hopefully allow a better understanding of
          the conditions whereby telomerase contributes to the tumorigenic
          process.
 Acknowledgements: This work was supported by the University
          of Buenos Aires, Argentina. We thank Manuel Gómez Carrillo for
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 Fig. 1.– Histology of thymoma1, mammary gland adenocarcinoma2,
          and Western blot to detect Polyoma major capsid protein VP-1 in these
          tumors, developed by chemoluminiscence3 A: purified VP-1, B: normal
          thymus, C-D: thymomas, E: normal mammary gland, F.G: mammary gland
          adenocarcinomas.Fig.2.– Telomerase activity. A. 1: positive control, 2: positive
          control treated with RNAse and heat, 3-5: normal mammary gland extract
          6-8 mammary gland adenocarcinoma extract. From left to right, lines 3
          to 8: 1 µg, 0.1 µg and 0.01 µg of protein in each sample. B. 1-3:
          normal thymus extract, 4-6: thymoma extract, 7-9: thymoma extract plus
          normal thymus extract. From left to right 1 µg, 0.1 µg and 0.01 µg
          of protein in each sample.
 
 
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