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J Virol. 1982 September; 43(3): 876-884

Mouse Mammary Tumor Virus Proviral Sequences Congenital to C3H/Sm Mice Are Differentially Hypomethylated in Chemically Induced, Virus-Induced, and Spontaneous Mammary Tumors

W. N. Drohan1, L. E. Benade1, D. E. Graham2 and G. H. Smith2

1 Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Biology, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland 20205
2 Laboratory of Molecular Biology, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland 20205

ABSTRACT

C3H/Sm mice have lost the exogenous milk-borne mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) characteristic of the C3H strain and have a very low (1.5%) incidence of spontaneous mammary tumors, yet they are highly susceptible to mammary carcinogenesis by either chemical carcinogens or infection with the milk-borne virus. We have analyzed the MMTV proviral DNA content of normal tissues and of spontaneous, virus-induced, and chemically induced mammary tumors by restriction endonuclease digestion and Southern blot analysis. Although the results clearly showed additional MMTV sequences in the virus-induced tumor which are not present in normal liver DNA, none of the spontaneous or chemically induced tumors could be shown to contain either newly acquired exogenous or amplified endogenous MMTV sequences. Interestingly, mammary tumors arising in C3H/Sm mice treated simultaneously with infectious MMTV (C3H) and dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA) possessed new exogenous MMTV DNA even though no quantitative change in tumor production was observed when these mice were compared with C3H/Sm mice treated with DMBA alone (Smith et al., Int. J. Cancer 26:373-379, 1980). Our data indicate that the endogenous MMTV proviral units are extensively methylated in normal tissues, such as livers and normal nonlactating mammary glands. In the absence of MMTV (C3H), we found that in the rare, spontaneously occurring C3H/Sm mammary tumors, certain endogenous MMTV sequences were specifically hypomethylated. Hypomethylation of endogenous MMTV sequences was also noted in the chemically induced mammary tumors, even though radioimmune competition assays for MMTV gp52 and p28 are negative (Smith et al., Int. J. Cancer 27:81-86, 1981). Our results support the conclusion that amplification of endogenous MMTV sequences is not intrinsic to C3H/Sm mouse mammary tumors arising spontaneously or after induction by chemicals. On the other hand, integration of exogenous MMTV DNA into the genome was a constant feature of mammary tumors developing in MMTV (C3H)-infected C3H/Sm mice, even when DMBA was used as the carcinogen. Hypomethylation of some endogenous MMTV sequences is characteristic of C3H/Sm mammary tumors, whether spontaneous or induced by chemicals, which suggests that these sequences are located in actively transcribing regions of the tumor cell genome.


J Virol. 1982 September; 43(3): 876-884







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