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Endocrine-Related Cancer 16 (1) 99 -111     DOI: 10.1677/ERC-08-0185
Copyright © 2009 by the Society for Endocrinology
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Molecular classification of spontaneous endometrial adenocarcinomas in BDII rats

Emma Samuelson1,2, Carola Hedberg1,2, Staffan Nilsson3 and Afrouz Behboudi1

1 Department of Medical and Clinical Genetics, Institute of Biomedicine, University of Gothenburg, Sahlgrenska Academy, SE 40530 Gothenburg, Sweden2 Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Genetics, Lundberg Laboratory, University of Gothenburg, SE 40530 Gothenburg, Sweden3 Department of Mathematical Statistics, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden

(Correspondence should be addressed to A Behboudi; Email: afrouz.behboudi{at}gu.se)

Female rats of the BDII/Han inbred strain are prone to spontaneously develop endometrial carcinomas (EC) that in cell biology and pathogenesis are very similar to those of human. Human EC are classified into two major groups: Type I displays endometroid histology, is hormone-dependent, and characterized by frequent microsatellite instability and PTEN, K-RAS, and CTNNB1 (β-Catenin) mutations; Type II shows non-endometrioid histology, is hormone-unrelated, displays recurrent TP53 mutation, CDKN2A (P16) inactivation, over-expression of ERBB2 (Her2/neu), and reduced CDH1 (Cadherin 1 or E-Cadherin) expression. However, many human EC have overlapping clinical, morphologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular features of types I and II. The EC developed in BDII rats can be related to type I tumors, since they are hormone-related and histologically from endometrioid type. Here, we combined gene sequencing (Pten, Ifr1, and Ctnnb1) and real-time gene expression analysis (Pten, Cdh1, P16, Erbb2, Ctnnb1, Tp53, and Irf1) to further characterize molecular alterations in this tumor model with respect to different subtypes of EC in humans. No mutation in Pten and Ctnnb1 was detected, whereas three tumors displayed sequence aberrations of the Irf1 gene. Significant down regulation of Pten, Cdh1, p16, Erbb2, and Ctnnb1 gene products was found in the tumors. In conclusion, our data suggest that molecular features of spontaneous EC in BDII rats can be related to higher-grade human type I tumors and thus, this model represents an excellent experimental tool for research on this malignancy in human.







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