Generation of a novel Fli-1 protein by gene targeting leads to a defect in thymus development and a delay in Friend virus-induced erythroleukemia

F Mélet, B Motro, DJ Rossi, L Zhang… - Molecular and cellular …, 1996 - Am Soc Microbiol
F Mélet, B Motro, DJ Rossi, L Zhang, A Bernstein
Molecular and cellular biology, 1996Am Soc Microbiol
The proto-oncogene Fli-1 is a member of the ets family of transcription factor genes. Its
activation by either chromosomal translocation or proviral insertion leads to Ewing's
sarcoma in humans or erythroleukemia in mice, respectively. Fli-1 is preferentially
expressed in hematopoietic and endothelial cells. This expression pattern resembled that of
c-ets-1, another ets gene closely related and physically linked to Fli-1. We also generated a
germ line mutation in Fli-1 by homologous recombination in embryonic stem cells …
Abstract
The proto-oncogene Fli-1 is a member of the ets family of transcription factor genes. Its activation by either chromosomal translocation or proviral insertion leads to Ewing’s sarcoma in humans or erythroleukemia in mice, respectively. Fli-1 is preferentially expressed in hematopoietic and endothelial cells. This expression pattern resembled that of c-ets-1, another ets gene closely related and physically linked to Fli-1. We also generated a germ line mutation in Fli-1 by homologous recombination in embryonic stem cells. Homozygous mutant mice exhibit thymic hypocellularity which is not related to a defect in a specific subpopulation of thymocytes or to increased apoptosis, suggesting that Fli-1 is an important regulator of a prethymic T-cell progenitor. This thymus phenotype was corrected by crossing the Fli-1-deficient mice with transgenic mice expressing Fli-1 cDNA. Homozygous mutant mice remained susceptible to erythroleukemia induction by Friend murine leukemia virus, although the latency period was significantly increased. Surprisingly, the mutant Fli-1 allele was still a target for Friend murine leukemia virus integration, and leukemic spleens with a rearranged Fli-1 gene expressed a truncated Fli-1 protein that appears to arise from an internal translation initiation site and alternative splicing around the neo cassette used in the gene targeting. The fortuitous discovery of the mutant Fli-1 protein, revealed only as the result of the clonal expansion of leukemic cells harboring a rearranged Fli-1 gene, suggests caution in the interpretation of gene-targeting experiments that result in either no or only a subtle phenotypic alteration.
American Society for Microbiology