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Anin vivogenetic screen inDrosophilaidentifies the orthologue of human cancer/testis geneSPO11among a network of targets to inhibitlethal(3)malignant brain tumourgrowth
Author(s) -
Fabrizio Rossi,
Cristina Molnar,
Kazuya Hashiyama,
Jan Peter Heinen,
Judit Pampalona,
Salud Llamazares,
José Reina,
Tomomi Hashiyama,
Madhulika Rai,
G. Pollarolo,
Ismael FernándezHernández,
Cayetano González
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
open biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.078
H-Index - 53
ISSN - 2046-2441
DOI - 10.1098/rsob.170156
Subject(s) - biology , gene , carcinogenesis , transcriptome , rna interference , drosophila melanogaster , cancer , transgene , somatic cell , genetics , genetic screen , homologous recombination , function (biology) , phenotype , cancer research , microbiology and biotechnology , gene expression , rna
Using transgenic RNAi technology, we have screened over 4000 genes to identify targets to inhibit malignant growth caused by the loss of function of lethal(3)malignant brain tumour in Drosophila in vivo We have identified 131 targets, which belong to a wide range of gene ontologies. Most of these target genes are not significantly overexpressed in mbt tumours hence showing that, rather counterintuitively, tumour-linked overexpression is not a good predictor of functional requirement. Moreover, we have found that most of the genes upregulated in mbt tumours remain overexpressed in tumour-suppressed double-mutant conditions, hence revealing that most of the tumour transcriptome signature is not necessarily correlated with malignant growth. One of the identified target genes is meiotic W68 ( mei-W68 ), the Drosophila orthologue of the human cancer/testis gene Sporulation-specific protein 11 ( SPO11 ), the enzyme that catalyses the formation of meiotic double-strand breaks. We show that Drosophila mei-W68/SPO11 drives oncogenesis by causing DNA damage in a somatic tissue, hence providing the first instance in which a SPO11 orthologue is unequivocally shown to have a pro-tumoural role. Altogether, the results from this screen point to the possibility of investigating the function of human cancer relevant genes in a tractable experimental model organism like Drosophila.

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