Imperial Cancer Research Fund, Tumour Immunology Unit, University
College London,
Department of Biology, Medawar Building, Gower Street, London, WC1E
6BT, UK
Each of the successive Wilsede Symposia has provided a fine vantage
point from which to survey current progress in leukaemia research.
Because of their regularity, their consistently high standard of
presentation, their broad international coverage, and their informal
but highly critical atmosphere they have come to be accepted as
providing authoritative statements of the achievements and research
agenda of the day. This is the eighth of these biennial symposia,
and it conforms to the same high standards. From this vantage point
in 1988 the most striking feature is the enormous strength and breadth
of molecular genetics. This starts from the now universally accepted
assumption that leukaemia, in common with other forms of neoplasia,
develops as a result of mutational changes in the genome of a cell.
These mutational changes occur serially and embrace a fairly wide
range of options, that evidently include rearrangements, deletions,
and loss of DNA as well as single-base substitution. Our background
thinking on this subject is 8eeply coloured by knowledge of the
cumulative increase of cancer incidence with age, cooperation between
cytoplasmic and nuclear oncogenes, and the special susceptibility
to DNA transformation of partially transformed cell lines. This
view now dictates the main agenda of leukaemia research, which is
to elucidate the mechanisms through which these mutational changes
alter the behaviour of cells. An understanding of these mechanisms,
it is confidently believed, will enable us to control and eventually
eradicate leukaemia and other forms of cancer. Not only does genetics
dictate the agenda, but also in the form of recombinant DNA technology
provides an immensely powerful set of tools. With these tools one
felt at this symposium that almost any task can now be accomplished:
sites of mutation can be located with total precision, functions
identified by sitespecific mutagenesis, and the interactions of
a gene or its control elements with the rest of the cell can be
analysed by transfection. Things move with great speed because DNA
is after alljust DNA: each protein confronts us with a new set of
problems, but the problems posed by a gene and the methods for solving
them by recombinant DNA technology are transferable. For instance
this symposium includes reports on the first fruits in human leukaemia
research of Cetus' new method ofgenerating multiple copies of a
short length of DNA in between oligonucleotide end-markers. The
method is used by J. Rowley to study chromosome breakpoints, and
by R.-A. Padua to identify Ras mutations. Within the landscape defined
by genetics a signi~icant shift in emphasis is taking place, from
dominant to recessive oncogenes. This is an abbreviated and somewhat
misleading way of characterizing an important shift in the direction
of research. The crucial point is not so much how many copies of
a gene are needed for manifestation in the phenotype of a cell,
but how the gene works. In general, genes that code for growth fac-
tors, their receptors, or the cascade of messages that they trigger
in the cell produce cancer through activation; while those that
code for mechanisms of differentiation do so through inactivation.
And, in general, since both copies of a diploid gene will need to
be inactivated to prevent differentiation, the latter will behave
as recessives. The new emphasis then is on genes that control differentiation,
and their inactivation as differentiation-oncogenes in cancer. This
emphasis goes back to the pioneering work of H. Harris in somatic
genetics, where cancer cells upon fusion with normal cells generally
display a normal phenotype. New experimental results to the same
effect were presented in a poster by J. Wolf et al. on fusions between
malignant and non-malignant B cells, and similar results in the
papilloma virus system were discussed by H. zur Hausen. Over the
last 2 decades this line of research became bogged down in sterile
controversy about the generality of the result, and exactly what
the famous Minz-Ihlmensee "suppression of malignancy by differentiation"
experiments really mean. Now, thanks to molecular genetics, a way
forward is open. Leading on from the original ideas derived from
work on somatic hybrids, three lines of approach to the recessive
oncogene problem can be distinguished in this symposium. One is
via formal genetics, and represents development of the concepts
first formulated to explain the familial inheritance of retinoblastoma,
Wilm's tumour, and coeliac polyposis. Another is via development,
where our increasing understanding of molecular mechanisms in cell
biology helps to identify situations in which recessive oncogenes
able to inhibit normal differentiation might operate. And a third
relates to the major growth factors that are normally associated
with dominant oncogenes: research on these molecules and their receptors
is beginning to identify control mechanisms that regulate their
activity, and that may themselves be disrupted by recessive oncogenes.
The first of these lines of approach is represented by the contributions
of J. Rowley, E Anders, and M. Dean. In her outstanding Frederick
Stohlmann Lecture, Rowley surveys the role that chromosome studies
have played in identifying dominant oncogenes, and goes on to mention
her current interest in monosomy of human chromosome 5 as indicative
of recessive oncogene activity. As this chromosome also carries
genes for growth factors and their receptors, it is possible - perhaps
even likely - that closely linked recessive oncogenes may regulate
the expression of these potentially dangerous molecules (at least
that is what I understand her to have told me in conversation).
Ander's vast effort in the genetics of congenital melanoma in fish
(extended also to the genetics of carcinogen susceptibility) has
revealed much about the control of dominant oncogenes by the rest
of the genome. My guess is that in the future this branch of genetics
will need to focus on these presumably recessive control elements,
and that something like the mouse recombinant inbred lines will
be needed for that task a formidable undertaking. Dean describes
an ongoing study of the long arm of human chromosome 7, often missing
in myelodisplastic syndrome with all that that implies for the operation
of recessive oncogenes. The second line of approach, through development,
is evident in the papers of M. Moore, T. Waldmann, N. HaranGhera,
A. Friedenstein, T. M. Dexter, D. Mason, K. Rajewsky, and E Melchers.
Analysis of the interactions between haemopoietic cells and their
surrounding stromal cells makes steady progress and the molecules
involved in this binding are becoming clearer: this is an area that
Friedenstein pioneered, and where Dexter is moving ahead with his
studies of solid-phase-bound IL-3. Cell-bound and matrix-bound growth/differentiation
functions are here to stay. Perhaps the best-characterized differentiation
factor, and certainly the one where a potential for recessive oncogene
activity is most evident in its title, is D. Gearing's leukaemic
inhibitory factor. The contribution of M. Lenardo and M. Greaves
take us deep into the molecular mechanisms of transcriptional control
that underline differentiation. Finally there are the studies that
sketch in the way that dominant oncogenes either respond to developmental
control, or escape: those of~ Ostertag, ~1! Alexander, C. Moroni,
and T. Ernst. The last of these provides novel and interesting evidence
that enhanced levels of CSF production in leukaemic cells, and the
autocrine stimulation that ensues from this, may reflect increased
mRNA stability rather than increased transcription: a post-transcriptional
modification, and therefore yet one more candidate site for the
operation of recessive oncogenes.
|