Control of growth: the Drosophila Myc homolog

Published on March 31, 2010   32 min

A selection of talks on Cell Biology

Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello. I'm Peter Gallant from the University of Wurzburg in Germany. I'm going to tell you about the function of the Myc protein in Drosophila. In particular its role in controlling growth.
0:13
Two research interests converge on the Myc gene, on one hand, the wish to understand and treat human cancers. On the other hand, the desire for describing the mechanisms that control animal size during development. However, it was the connection of Myc to tumors that led to the identification of the Drosophila Myc gene. In the 1960s, several retroviruses were isolated that caused tumors in chickens. The advent of molecular cloning later allowed the isolation of the transforming principle in these viruses. A gene that was dubbed viral myelocytomatosis gene or v-Myc. Subsequently related genes were identified in the human genome. The first of these were called C-Myc and N-Myc and L-Myc. Most interestingly, these genes were found to be overexpressed in many human tumors, often as a consequence of gene amplifications or rearrangements. For example, virtually all cases of Burkitt's lymphoma carry translocations of the C-Myc locus that juxtaposed the protein-coding sequences to the strong regulatory regions of immunoglobulin genes. In other tumors, Myc levels are increased transcriptional or post-translational as a consequence of the activation of other oncogenic lesions, such as the Wnt signaling pathway. Altogether, it is estimated that up to 70 percent of human tumors contain elevated amounts of Myc. These increased Myc levels indeed played a causal role in transformation, as was shown in many different mouse models, such as the famous E mu-myc mouse that was generated by Gerry Adams a quarter-century ago. In these animals, C-Myc is expressed under the control of the immunoglobulin mu enhancer, which leads to the development of lymphomas. How then, to make proteins achieve
Hide

Control of growth: the Drosophila Myc homolog

Embed in course/own notes