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Query: UMLS:C0004135 (
ATM
)
13,001
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The generation of transgenic mice overexpressing activated forms of oncogenes has greatly advanced our understanding into their roles in mammary tumor initiation, promotion and progression. However, targeted disruption of tumor suppressor genes often results in lethality at stages prior to mammary tumor formation. This obstacle can now be overcome using several approaches including conditional knockouts that delete genes of interest in a spatial and temporal manner. This review summarizes recent studies on tumor suppressor genes, including APC,
ATM
, BRCA1,
BRCA2
, PTEN and p53, in knockout mouse models and our understanding of the possible mechanisms underlying mammary tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Knockout mouse models and mammary tumorigenesis. 1156 81
Understanding the molecular and genetic events affecting breast cancer development not only helps oncologists address important questions commonly asked by their patients but also helps clinicians gain insights into the biology of the disease. Although the molecular and genetic determinants of most sporadic breast cancer remain unknown, significant advances in the understanding of events that contribute to breast cancer formation have been made. It is now recognized that mutations in some tumor suppressor genes, such as p53, BRCA1,
BRCA2
, PTEN, or
ATM
, or epigenetic functional inactivation of other tumor suppressor genes, such as SYK and NES1, appear to play important early roles in the formation of some breast cancers. In addition, alterations in proto-oncogenes, such as HER2/neu, may contribute to the development of some breast cancer. The goal of this article is to further introduce clinicians to molecular and genetic pathways that contribute to breast cancer formation. By participating in the study of breast cancer development at the molecular as well as the histopathological level, oncologists can help develop novel prevention, diagnostic, and therapeutic approaches for the future.
...
PMID:Molecular biology and genetics of breast cancer development: a clinical perspective. 1238 87
The molecular basis of sensitivity to therapeutic radiation and chemotherapy is a complex product of cellular and tissue responses. Certain genetic factors can be highlighted as being of special importance in the response of breast cancers to treatment. The breast cancer susceptibility genes, BRCA1 and
BRCA2
, determine the phenotype of the tumor, with BRCA1- or
BRCA2
-deficient tumors showing marked sensitivity to ionizing radiation and drugs that produce double-strand breaks. However, the extent to which loss of BRCA1 or
BRCA2
function occurs in sporadic cancer has not yet been determined. The ATM protein plays a significant role in determining the response to therapy, but how frequently the function of
ATM
is disrupted in breast cancer is debated. Although the p53 protein is a major determinant of the response to ionizing radiation and cytotoxic drugs, there is no consistency in how p53 affects the survival of cells, because an impairment of DNA repair is offset by reduced apoptosis. Growth factors that sustain the proliferation of breast cancer cells may impact the response to therapy by inhibiting apoptosis. Loss of cell-cycle checkpoint responses may result in increased sensitivity, particularly if the checkpoint controls the G2 transition. Overexpression of cyclin D, which shortens the duration of the G1 transition, is associated with mild radiation resistance, perhaps by inhibiting apoptosis. Overall, there is much more to be understood in the complex response of breast cancers to therapy, and many other proteins play important roles in the response to treatment. The focus of our investigation is on those genetic alterations in tumors that affect the response to therapy, which will ultimately allow strategies to achieve therapeutic gain.
...
PMID:The molecular basis of radiosensitivity and chemosensitivity in the treatment of breast cancer. 1238 88
Fanconi anemia (FA) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by cellular hypersensitivity to DNA cross-linking agents and cancer predisposition. Recent evidence for the interactions of ataxia-telangiectasia mutated protein
ATM
and breast cancer susceptibility proteins BRCA1 and
BRCA2
(identified as FANCD1) with other known FA proteins suggests that FA proteins have a significant role in DNA repair/recombination and cell cycle control. The International Fanconi Anemia Registry (IFAR), a prospectively collected database of FA patients, allows us the unique opportunity to analyze the natural history of this rare, clinically heterogeneous disorder in a large number of patients. Of the 754 subjects in this study, 601 (80%) experienced the onset of bone marrow failure (BMF), and 173 (23%) had a total of 199 neoplasms. Of these neoplasms, 120 (60%) were hematologic and 79 (40%) were nonhematologic. The risk of developing BMF and hematologic and nonhematologic neoplasms increased with advancing age with a 90%, 33%, and 28% cumulative incidence, respectively, by 40 years of age. Univariate analysis revealed a significantly earlier onset of BMF and poorer survival for complementation group C compared with groups A and G; however, there was no significant difference in the time to hematologic or nonhematologic neoplasm development between these groups. Multivariate analysis of overall survival time shows that FANCC mutations (P =.007) and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (P = <.0001) define a poor-risk subgroup. The results of this study of patients registered in the IFAR over a 20-year period provide information that will enable better prediction of outcome and aid clinicians with decisions regarding major therapeutic modalities.
...
PMID:A 20-year perspective on the International Fanconi Anemia Registry (IFAR). 1258 46
We review the genes and proteins related to the homologous recombinational repair (HRR) pathway that are implicated in cancer through either genetic disorders that predispose to cancer through chromosome instability or the occurrence of somatic mutations that contribute to carcinogenesis.
Ataxia telangiectasia
(AT), Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS), and an ataxia-like disorder (ATLD), are chromosome instability disorders that are defective in the ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM), NBS, and Mre11 genes, respectively. These genes are critical in maintaining cellular resistance to ionizing radiation (IR), which kills largely by the production of double-strand breaks (DSBs). Bloom syndrome involves a defect in the BLM helicase, which seems to play a role in restarting DNA replication forks that are blocked at lesions, thereby promoting chromosome stability. The Werner syndrome gene (WRN) helicase, another member of the RecQ family like BLM, has very recently been found to help mediate homologous recombination. Fanconi anemia (FA) is a genetically complex chromosomal instability disorder involving seven or more genes, one of which is
BRCA2
. FA may be at least partially caused by the aberrant production of reactive oxidative species. The breast cancer-associated BRCA1 and
BRCA2
proteins are strongly implicated in HRR;
BRCA2
associates with Rad51 and appears to regulate its activity. We discuss in detail the phenotypes of the various mutant cell lines and the signaling pathways mediated by the ATM kinase. ATM's phosphorylation targets can be grouped into oxidative stress-mediated transcriptional changes, cell cycle checkpoints, and recombinational repair. We present the DNA damage response pathways by using the DSB as the prototype lesion, whose incorrect repair can initiate and augment karyotypic abnormalities.
...
PMID:Recombinational DNA repair and human disease. 1242 31
Fanconi anaemia (FA) is a rare autosomal recessive disease characterized by increased spontaneous and DNA crosslinker-induced chromosome instability, progressive pancytopenia and cancer susceptibility. An increasing number of genes are involved in FA, including the breast cancer susceptibility gene
BRCA2
. Five of the FA proteins (FANCA, FANCC, FANCE, FANCF and FANCG) assemble in a complex that is required for FANCD2 activation in response to DNA crosslinks. Active FANCD2 then interacts with BRCA1 and forms discrete nuclear foci. FANCD2 is independently phosphorylated by
ATM
(the protein whose gene is mutated in
ataxia telangiectasia
) in response to ionizing radiation. In addition, the FA proteins are interconnected with other nuclear and cytoplasmic factors all related to cellular responses to carcinogenic stress and to caretaker and gatekeeper functions. In this review, the most recently published data on the molecular biology of the FA pathway and its molecular crosstalk with
ATM
, BRCA1 and
BRCA2
, proteins involved in xenobiotic and reactive oxygen species metabolism, apoptosis, cell cycle control and telomere stability, are summarized. The currently available data indicate that FA is a central node in a complex nuclear and cytoplasmic network of tumour suppressor and genome stability pathways fully committed to prevent cancer.
...
PMID:The Fanconi anaemia genome stability and tumour suppressor network. 1243 50
To facilitate association-based linkage studies we have studied the linkage disequilibrium (LD) and haplotype architecture around five genes of interest for cancer risk:
ATM
, BRCA1,
BRCA2
, RAD51, and TP53. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were identified and used to construct haplotypes that span 93-200 kb per locus with an average SNP density of 12 kb. These markers were genotyped in four ethnically defined populations that contained 48 each of African Americans, Asian Americans, Hispanic Americans, and European Americans. Haplotypes were inferred using an expectation maximization (EM) algorithm, and the data were analyzed using D', R(2), Fisher's exact P-values, and the four-gamete test for recombination. LD levels varied widely between loci from continuously high LD across 200 kb to a virtual absence of LD across a similar length of genome. LD structure also varied at each gene and between populations studied. This variation indicates that the success of linkage-based studies will require a precise description of LD at each locus and in each population to be studied. One striking consistency between genes was that at each locus a modest number of haplotypes present in each population accounted for a high fraction of the total number of chromosomes. We conclude that each locus has its own genomic profile with regard to LD, and despite this there is the widespread trend of relatively low haplotype diversity. As a result, a low marker density should be adequate to identify haplotypes that represent the common variation at a locus, thereby decreasing costs and increasing efficacy of association studies.
...
PMID:Haplotype and linkage disequilibrium architecture for human cancer-associated genes. 1246 88
With the increasing of the incidence rate of breast carcinoma year after year, the susceptibility genes of breast carcinoma was paid more and more attention. The study on susceptibility genes play an important role in early diagnosis and prevention for the individuals with family history of breast carcinoma, elucidation of pathologic mechanism of sporadic breast carcinoma, early diagnosis and adjudging prognosis, research on drug sensitivity, differential diagnosis of benign and malignant disease, etc. There were many studies on the high-penetrance susceptibility genes (BRCA1,
BRCA2
). However, some low-penetrance susceptibility gene, for example, the members of hormone metabolism related enzymes genes CYP family (CYP17, CYP19, CYP1A1, etc.), the carcinogen metabolism related gene (GSTM1, NAT1, NAT2), and DNA damage repair gene (
ATM
) were not clearly understood. The aim of this study was to review the present research situation of common susceptibility genes of breast carcinoma found already.
...
PMID:[Research on breast cancer susceptibility genes]. 1250 56
Fanconi anaemia (FA) is an autosomal recessive disease characterised by congenital abnormalities, defective haemopoiesis, and a high risk of developing acute myeloid leukaemia and certain solid tumours. Chromosomal instability, especially on exposure to alkylating agents, may be shown in affected subjects and is the basis for a diagnostic test. FA can be caused by mutations in at least seven different genes. Interaction pathways have been established, both between the FA proteins and other proteins involved in DNA damage repair, such as
ATM
, BRCA1 and
BRCA2
, thereby providing a link with other disorders in which defective DNA damage repair is a feature. This review summarises the clinical features of FA and the natural history of the disease, discusses diagnosis and management, and puts the recent molecular advances into the context of the cellular and clinical FA phenotype.
...
PMID:Fanconi anaemia. 1252 34
Telomeres, functional complexes that protect eukaryotic chromosome ends, participate in the regulation of cell proliferation and could play a role in the stabilization of genomic regions in response to genotoxic stress. Their significance in human pathology becomes evident in several diseases sharing genomic instability as a common trait, in which alterations of the telomere metabolism have been demonstrated. Many of them are also associated with hypersensitivity to ionizing radiation and cancer susceptibility. Besides the specific proteins belonging to the telomeric complex, other proteins involved in the DNA repair machinery, such as
ATM
, BRCA1,
BRCA2
, PARP/tankyrase system, DNA-PK and RAD50-MRE11-NBS1 complexes, are closely related with the telomere. This suggests that the telomere sequesters DNA repair proteins for its own structure maintenance, which could also be released toward damaged sites in the genomic DNA. This communication describes essential aspects of telomere structure and function and their links with homologous recombination, non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ), V(D)J system and mismatch-repair (MMR). Several pathological conditions exhibiting alterations in some of these mechanisms are also considered. The cell response to ionizing radiation and its relationship with the telomeric metabolism is particularly taken into account as a model for studying genotoxicity.
...
PMID:[Telomeres and genomic damage repair. Their implication in human pathology]. 1253 99
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