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Epidermal CYLD inactivation sensitizes mice to the development of sebaceous and basaloid skin tumors.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Jin, YJ; Wang, S; Cho, J; Selim, MA; Wright, T; Mosialos, G; Zhang, JY
Published in: JCI Insight
July 21, 2016

The deubiquitinase-encoding gene Cyld displays a dominant genetic linkage to a wide spectrum of skin-appendage tumors, which could be collectively designated as CYLD mutant-syndrome (CYLDm-syndrome). Despite recent advances, little is understood about the molecular mechanisms responsible for this painful and difficult-to-treat skin disease. Here, we generated a conditional mouse model with epidermis-targeted expression of a catalytically deficient CYLDm through K14-Cre-mediated deletion of exon 9 (hereafter refer to CyldEΔ9/Δ9 ). CyldEΔ9/Δ9 mice were born alive but developed hair and sebaceous gland abnormalities and dental defects at 100% and 60% penetrance, respectively. Upon topical challenge with DMBA/TPA, these animals primarily developed sebaceous and basaloid tumors resembling human CYLDm-syndrome as opposed to papilloma, which is most commonly induced in WT mice by this treatment. Molecular analysis revealed that TRAF6-K63-Ubiquitination (K63-Ub), c-Myc-K63-Ub, and phospho-c-Myc (S62) were markedly elevated in CyldEΔ9/Δ9 skin. Topical treatment with a pharmacological c-Myc inhibitor induced sebaceous and basal cell apoptosis in CyldEΔ9/Δ9 skin. Consistently, c-Myc activation was readily detected in human cylindroma and sebaceous adenoma. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that CyldEΔ9/Δ9 mice represent a disease-relevant animal model and identify TRAF6 and c-Myc as potential therapeutic targets for CYLDm-syndrome.

Duke Scholars

Published In

JCI Insight

DOI

ISSN

2379-3708

Publication Date

July 21, 2016

Volume

1

Issue

11

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • 42 Health sciences
  • 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
 

Citation

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Jin, Y. J., Wang, S., Cho, J., Selim, M. A., Wright, T., Mosialos, G., & Zhang, J. Y. (2016). Epidermal CYLD inactivation sensitizes mice to the development of sebaceous and basaloid skin tumors. JCI Insight, 1(11). https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.86548
Jin, Yingai Jane, Sally Wang, Joshua Cho, M Angelica Selim, Tim Wright, George Mosialos, and Jennifer Y. Zhang. “Epidermal CYLD inactivation sensitizes mice to the development of sebaceous and basaloid skin tumors.JCI Insight 1, no. 11 (July 21, 2016). https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.86548.
Jin YJ, Wang S, Cho J, Selim MA, Wright T, Mosialos G, et al. Epidermal CYLD inactivation sensitizes mice to the development of sebaceous and basaloid skin tumors. JCI Insight. 2016 Jul 21;1(11).
Jin, Yingai Jane, et al. “Epidermal CYLD inactivation sensitizes mice to the development of sebaceous and basaloid skin tumors.JCI Insight, vol. 1, no. 11, July 2016. Pubmed, doi:10.1172/jci.insight.86548.
Jin YJ, Wang S, Cho J, Selim MA, Wright T, Mosialos G, Zhang JY. Epidermal CYLD inactivation sensitizes mice to the development of sebaceous and basaloid skin tumors. JCI Insight. 2016 Jul 21;1(11).

Published In

JCI Insight

DOI

ISSN

2379-3708

Publication Date

July 21, 2016

Volume

1

Issue

11

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • 42 Health sciences
  • 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences