Neoplasia: An International Journal for Oncology Research (Jul 2021)

DNA polymerase β deficiency promotes the occurrence of esophageal precancerous lesions in mice

  • Jiace Qin,
  • Yanyan Zhu,
  • Yongwei Ding,
  • Tingting Niu,
  • Yangyang Zhang,
  • Huiting Wu,
  • Lili Zhu,
  • Baoyin Yuan,
  • Yan Qiao,
  • Jing Lu,
  • Kangdong Liu,
  • Ziming Dong,
  • Ge Jin,
  • Xinhuan Chen,
  • Jimin Zhao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 7
pp. 663 – 675

Abstract

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Esophageal mucosa undergoes mild, moderate, severe dysplasia, and other precancerous lesions and eventually develops into carcinoma in situ, and understanding the developmental progress of esophageal precancerous lesions is beneficial to prevent them from developing into cancer. DNA polymerase β (Polβ), a crucial enzyme of the base excision repair system, plays an important role in repairing damaged DNA and maintaining genomic stability. Abnormal expression or deletion mutation of Polβ is related to the occurrence of esophageal cancer, but the role of Polβ deficiency in the esophageal precancerous lesions is still unclear. Here, esophageal mucosa Polβ-knockout mice were used to explore the relationship of Polβ deficiency with esophageal precancerous lesions. First, we found the degree and number of esophageal precancerous lesions in Polβ-KO mice were more serious than those in Polβ-Loxp mice after N-nitrosomethylbenzylamine (NMBA) treatment. Whole exome sequencing revealed that deletion of Polβ increased the frequency of gene mutations. Gene expression prolife analysis showed that the expression of proteins correlated to cell proliferation and the cell cycle was elevated in Polβ-KO mice. We also found that deletion of Polβ promoted the proliferation and clone formation as well as accelerated cell cycle progression of human immortalized esophageal epithelial cell line SHEE treated with NMBA. Our findings indicate that Polβ knockout promotes the occurrence of esophageal precancerous lesions.

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