Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is the most common cancer predisposition syndrome affecting the nervous system, with elevated
risk for both astrocytoma and peripheral nerve sheath tumors. NF1 is caused by a germline mutation in the
NF1 gene, with tumors showing loss of the wild type copy of
NF1. In addition,
NF1 heterozygosity in surrounding stroma is important for tumor formation, suggesting an additional role of haploinsufficiency
for
NF1. Studies in mouse models and NF1 families have implicated modifier genes unlinked to
NF1 in the severity of the disease and in susceptibility to astrocytoma and peripheral nerve sheath tumors. To determine if differences
in
Nf1 expression may contribute to the strain-specific effects on tumor predisposition, we examined the levels of
Nf1 gene expression in mouse strains with differences in tumor susceptibility using quantitative polymerase chain reaction. The
data presented in this paper demonstrate that strain background has as much effect on
Nf1 expression levels as mutation of one
Nf1 allele, indicating that studies of haploinsufficiency must be carefully interpreted with respect to strain background. Because
expression levels do not correlate entirely with the susceptibility or resistance to tumors observed in the strain, these
data suggest that either variation in
Nf1 levels is not responsible for the differences in astrocytoma and peripheral nerve sheath tumor susceptibility in
Nf1-/+;Trp53-/+cis mice, or that certain mouse strains have evolved compensatory mechanisms for differences in
Nf1 expression.
Keywords Neurofibromatosis -
Nf1
- Haploinsufficiency - Astrocytoma - Peripheral nerve sheath tumor