PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

PTEN redundancy: overexpressing lpten, a homolog of Dictyostelium discoideum ptenA, the ortholog of human PTEN, rescues all behavioral defects of the mutant ptenA-.

  • Daniel F Lusche,
  • Deborah Wessels,
  • Nicole A Richardson,
  • Kanoe B Russell,
  • Brett M Hanson,
  • Benjamin A Soll,
  • Benjamin H Lin,
  • David R Soll

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0108495
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 9
p. e108495

Abstract

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Mutations in the tumor suppressor gene PTEN are associated with a significant proportion of human cancers. Because the human genome also contains several homologs of PTEN, we considered the hypothesis that if a homolog, functionally redundant with PTEN, can be overexpressed, it may rescue the defects of a PTEN mutant. We have performed an initial test of this hypothesis in the model system Dictyostelium discoideum, which contains an ortholog of human PTEN, ptenA. Deletion of ptenA results in defects in motility, chemotaxis, aggregation and multicellular morphogenesis. D. discoideum also contains lpten, a newly discovered homolog of ptenA. Overexpressing lpten completely rescues all developmental and behavioral defects of the D. discoideum mutant ptenA-. This hypothesis must now be tested in human cells.