4 research outputs found

    Tissue-selective expression of a conditionally-active ROCK2-estrogen receptor fusion protein

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    The serine/threonine kinases ROCK1 and ROCK2 are central mediators of actomyosin contractile force generation that act downstream of the RhoA small GTP-binding protein. As a result, they have key roles in regulating cell morphology and proliferation, and have been implicated in numerous pathological conditions and diseases including hypertension and cancer. Here we describe the generation of a gene-targeted mouse line that enables CRE-inducible expression of a conditionally-active fusion between the ROCK2 kinase domain and the hormone-binding domain of a mutated estrogen receptor (ROCK2:ER). This two-stage system of regulation allows for tissue-selective expression of the ROCK2:ER fusion protein, which then requires administration of estrogen analogues such as tamoxifen or 4-hydroxytamoxifen to elicit kinase activity. This conditional gain-of-function system was validated in multiple tissues by crossing with mice expressing CRE recombinase under the transcriptional control of cytokeratin14 (K14), murine mammary tumor virus (MMTV) or cytochrome P450 Cyp1A1 (Ah) promoters, driving appropriate expression in the epidermis, mammary or intestinal epithelia respectively. Given the interest in ROCK signaling in normal physiology and disease, this mouse line will facilitate research into the consequences of ROCK activation that could be used to complement conditional knockout models

    Epidermal ROCK2-induces AKT1/GSK3β/β-catenin, NFκB and dermal tenascin-C; but enhanced differentiation and p53/p21 inhibit papilloma

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    ROCK2 roles in epidermal differentiation and carcinogenesis have been investigated in mice expressing an RU486-inducible, 4HT-activated ROCK2 transgene (K14.creP/lslROCKer). RU486/4HT-mediated ROCKer activation induced epidermal hyperplasia similar to cutaneous oncogenic rasHa (HK1.ras); however ROCKer did not elicit papillomas. Instead, anomalous basal-layer ROCKer expression corrupted normal ROCK2 roles underlying epidermal rigidity/stiffness and barrier maintanance, resulting in premature keratin K1, loricrin and filaggrin expression. Also, hyperproliferative/stress-associated keratin K6 was reduced; possibly reflecting altered ROCK2 roles in epidermal rigidity and keratinocyte flexibility/migration during wound healing. Consistent with increased proliferation, K14.creP/lslROCKer hyperplasia displayed supra-basal-to-basal increases in activated p-AKT1, inactivated p-GSK3β ser9 and membranous/nuclear β-catenin expression together with weak NFκB, which were absent in equivalent HK1.ras hyperplasia. Furthermore, ROCKer-mediated increases in epidermal rigidity via p-MypT1 inactivation/elevated MLC, coupled to anomalous β-catenin expression, induced tenascin C-positive dermal fibroblasts. Alongside an altered ECM, these latent tenascin C-positive dermal fibroblasts may become putative pre-cancer–associated fibroblasts (pre-CAFs) and establish a susceptibility that subsequently contributes to tumour progression. However, anomalous differentiation was also accompanied by an immediate increase in basal-layer p53/p21 expression; suggesting that while ROCK2/AKT1/β-catenin activation increased keratinocyte proliferation resulting in hyperplasia, compensatory p53/p21 and accelerated differentiation helped inhibit papillomatogenesis
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