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Query: UMLS:C0027960 (
mole
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21,279
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Melanoma cells have surface markers that are expressed differently than in normal melanocytes and
nevus
cells. Monoclonal antibodies may define a phenotypic map of the various melanocytic lesions and can be used in immunohistopathology and immunoscintigraphy. Monoclonal antibodies directed against melanoma-associated glycoproteins and glycolipids are being tested for therapy. Rearrangements or deletions on chromosome 1, 6, and 7 are the most frequently observed cytogenetic abnormalities. Molecular studies have not given a clear picture. A subset of HRAS alleles has been reported to be associated with melanoma.
NRAS
activation by point mutation has been found in one fourth of the cases. Allele losses at different loci have been reported. Genetic linkage studies have given conflicting results on the presence of a gene for the melanoma-dysplastic nevus syndrome on the short arm of chromosome 1.
...
PMID:Cellular and molecular biology of melanoma. 143 44
Ras signaling is important for the intracellular transduction of mitogenic stimuli from activated growth factor receptors. We have investigated 37 sporadic malignant melanomas (15 primary cutaneous melanomas and 22 melanoma metastases) and 6 melanoma cell lines for mutations in the 3 Ras genes
NRAS
, KRAS and HRAS. All tumors and cell lines were additionally analyzed for mutation and expression of BRAF, which encodes a Ras-regulated serine/threonine kinase with oncogenic properties, as well as for expression of RASSF1A, which encodes a Ras-binding protein with tumor suppressor properties. Mutational analyses identified somatic
NRAS
mutations in 2 primary melanomas, 4 melanoma metastases and 2 cell lines. One melanoma metastasis showed a somatic KRAS mutation whereas HRAS mutations were not detected. Eight primary melanomas, 6 melanoma metastases and 4 melanoma cell lines carried BRAF mutations affecting the known hot-spot codon 599. None of the tumors or cell lines with BRAF mutation demonstrated
NRAS
or KRAS mutations. Real-time reverse transcription-PCR showed that 8 melanomas (3 primary tumors, 5 melanoma metastases) had reduced RASSF1A transcript levels of < or =50% relative to benign melanocytic
nevi
and normal skin. Three melanoma cell lines lacked detectable RASSF1A transcripts. The RASSF1A gene promoter was hypermethylated in these 3 cell lines as well as in 6 of 8 melanomas with reduced RASSF1A mRNA levels. Treatment of the cell lines with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine and trichostatin A resulted in demethylation of the RASSF1A promoter and re-expression of RASSF1A transcripts. Most tumors and all cell lines with RASSF1A promoter methylation additionally carried BRAF or
NRAS
mutations, suggesting a synergistic effect of these aberrations on melanoma growth. Taken together, 57% of the investigated melanomas and 100% of the melanoma cell lines carried mutations in either
NRAS
, KRAS or BRAF. In addition, 22% of the melanomas and 50% of the cell lines showed reduced RASSF1A transcript levels. Thus, alterations of Ras pathway genes are of paramount importance in the pathogenesis of sporadic melanomas.
...
PMID:Frequent alterations of Ras signaling pathway genes in sporadic malignant melanomas. 1496 76
Extant evidence implicates growth factor signaling in the pathogenesis of many tumor types, including cutaneous melanoma. Recently, reciprocal activating mutations of
NRAS
and BRAF were found in benign melanocytic
nevi
and cutaneous melanomas. We had previously reported a similar epistatic relationship between activating
NRAS
mutations and inactivating PTEN/MMAC1 alterations. We thus hypothesized that BRAF and PTEN/MMAC1 mutations may cooperate to promote melanoma tumorigenesis. Overall, 40 of 47 (85%) melanoma cell lines and 11 of 16 (69%) uncultured melanoma metastases had mutations in
NRAS
, BRAF, or PTEN/MMAC1.
NRAS
was exclusively mutated in nine of 47 (19%) cell lines and two of 16 (13%) metastases, whereas BRAF was solely mutated in 28 of 47 (60%) cell lines and nine of 16 (56%) metastases. In the 12 of 15 melanoma cell lines (80%) and two of two melanoma metastases with PTEN alterations, BRAF was also mutated. These findings suggest the existence of possible cooperation between BRAF activation and PTEN loss in melanoma development.
...
PMID:Genetic interaction between NRAS and BRAF mutations and PTEN/MMAC1 inactivation in melanoma. 2183 10
In this report, we investigated BRAF/
NRAS
mutations in samples from a case-control study of melanoma and a series of benign melanocytic
nevi
. We evaluated potential associations between BRAF mutations and histopathologic and pigmentary characteristics of melanoma. Mutations in BRAF and
NRAS
were detected by sequencing microdissected/laser-captured DNA from 18 in-situ melanomas, 64 primary melanomas, and 51
nevi
.
Nevi
showed the highest frequency of BRAF mutations (82%). BRAF mutations were identified in 29% of invasive melanomas and in only 5.6% of in-situ melanomas. Mutations in
NRAS
were found in 5.2% of primary melanomas, 5.9% of
nevi
and no
NRAS
mutations were seen in in-situ melanomas. A majority of the BRAF mutations observed in primary invasive melanoma were seen in superficial spreading melanoma (15/17), and melanomas with BRAF mutations were also more likely to be found on a body site that was likely to be exposed to intermittent sun exposure compared with chronic or no sun exposure (P=0.02). Tumors with BRAF mutations were also significantly more likely to occur in association with a contiguous
nevus
(odds ratio 3.49, 95% confidence interval 1.06-11.46), although a contiguous
nevus
was not found in all melanomas with a BRAF mutation. Our data support the evidence that the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway is upregulated in a large percentage of melanocytic lesions, but these mutations are not sufficient for malignant transformation. We suggest that BRAF mutations contribute to benign melanocytic hyperplasia, but are likely to contribute to invasive melanoma only in conjunction with other mutations.
...
PMID:BRAF and NRAS mutations in melanoma and melanocytic nevi. 1684 22
Most melanocytic
nevi
develop on sun-exposed skin during childhood and adolescence and commonly harbor BRAF mutations or, less frequently,
NRAS
mutations. A small subset of
nevi
is present at birth, and therefore must develop independently of UV light. To assess whether these
nevi
have a different mutation spectrum than those that develop on sun-exposed skin, we determined the BRAF and
NRAS
mutation frequencies in 32 truly congenital
nevi
. We found no BRAF mutations, but 81% (26/32) harbored mutations in
NRAS
. Consistently, seven of 10 (70%) proliferating nodules that developed early in life in congenital
nevi
showed mutations in
NRAS
. A separate set of
nevi
that displayed histological features frequently found in
nevi
present at birth ("congenital pattern nevi") but lacked a definitive history of presence at birth showed an inverse mutation pattern with common BRAF mutations (20/28 or 71%) and less frequent
NRAS
mutations (7/28 or 25%). Thus,
nevi
that develop in utero are genetically distinct from those that develop later, and histopathologic criteria alone are unable to reliably distinguish the two groups. The results are consistent with the finding in melanoma that BRAF mutations are uncommon in neoplasms that develop in the absence of sun-exposure.
...
PMID:Congenital melanocytic nevi frequently harbor NRAS mutations but no BRAF mutations. 1688 31
We have previously demonstrated the use of pyrosequencing to investigate
NRAS
[neuroblastoma RAS viral (v-ras) oncogene homolog] mutations in melanoma biopsies. Here, we expanded the analysis to include BRAF (V-raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B1), another member of the Ras-Raf-mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling pathway, and analysed a total of 294 melanoma tumours from 219 patients. Mutations in BRAF exons 11 and 15 were identified in 156 (53%) tumours and
NRAS
exon 2 mutations in 86 (29%) tumours. Overall, mutations in
NRAS
or BRAF were found in 242 of 294 tumours (82%) and were found to be mutually exclusive in all but two cases (0.7%). Multiple metastases were analysed in 57 of the cases and mutations were identical in all except three, indicating that BRAF and
NRAS
mutations occur before metastasis. Association with preexisting
nevi
was significantly higher in BRAF mutated tumours (P=0.014). In addition, tumours with BRAF mutations showed a significantly more frequent moderate to pronounced infiltration of lymphocytes (P=0.013).
NRAS
mutations were associated with a significantly higher Clark level of invasion (P=0.022) than BRAF mutations. Age at diagnosis was significantly higher in tumours with
NRAS
mutations than in those with BRAF mutations (P=0.019).
NRAS
and BRAF mutations, however, did not influence the overall survival from time of diagnosis (P=0.7). In conclusion, the separate genotypes were associated with differences in several key clinical and pathological parameters, indicating differences in the biology of melanoma tumours with different proto-oncogene mutations.
...
PMID:NRAS and BRAF mutations in melanoma tumours in relation to clinical characteristics: a study based on mutation screening by pyrosequencing. 1711 47
Genetic studies of melanocytic tumors have mainly demonstrated activation of oncogenes such as
NRAS
or BRAF through point mutations. In two cases of large congenital melanocytic
nevi
, we observed a chromosomal translocation involving the BRAF oncogene on chromosome 7q34, resulting in both cases in removal of the auto-inhibitory N-terminal regulatory domain (hence the Ras-guanosine triphosphate binding domain) of BRAF from its protein kinase domain. This is early evidence of BRAF activation through chromosomal translocation in melanocytic tumors. Because BRAF point mutations are rather rare in congenital melanocytic
nevi
and melanoma arising in non-sun-exposed area, the molecular mechanism of oncogenic activation as described here could be a recurrent molecular feature in these groups of melanocytic tumors.
...
PMID:Chromosomal translocations as a mechanism of BRAF activation in two cases of large congenital melanocytic nevi. 1730 36
Malignant melanomas often contain BRAF or
NRAS
mutations, but the relationship of these mutations to ambient UV exposure in combination with phenotypic characteristics is unknown. In a population-based case series from North Carolina, 214 first primary invasive melanoma patients in the year 2000 were interviewed regarding their risk factors. Ambient solar UV exposures were estimated using residential histories and a satellite-based model. Cases were grouped on the basis of BRAF and
NRAS
somatic mutations, determined using single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and radiolabeled DNA sequencing, and the risk profiles of these groups were compared. Mutually exclusive BRAF-mutant and
NRAS
-mutant cases occurred at frequencies of 43.0% and 13.6% with mean ages at diagnosis of 47.3 and 62.1 years, respectively. Tumors from patients with >14 back
nevi
were more likely to harbor either a BRAF mutation [age-adjusted odds ratio (OR), 3.2; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 1.4-7.0] or an
NRAS
mutation (age-adjusted OR, 1.7; 95% CI, 0.6-4.8) compared with patients with 0 to 4 back
nevi
. However, BRAF-mutant and
NRAS
-mutant tumors were distinctive in that BRAF-mutant tumors were characteristic of patients with high early-life ambient UV exposure (adjusted OR, 2.6; 95% CI, 1.2-5.3). When ambient UV irradiance was analyzed by decadal age, high exposure at ages 0 to 20 years was associated with BRAF-mutant cases, whereas high exposure at ages 50 and 60 years was characteristic of
NRAS
-mutant cases. Our results suggest that although
nevus
propensity is important for the occurrence of both BRAF and
NRAS
-mutant melanomas, ambient UV irradiance influences risk differently based on the age of exposure. The association of BRAF mutations with early-life UV exposure provides evidence in support of childhood sun protection for melanoma prevention.
...
PMID:Number of nevi and early-life ambient UV exposure are associated with BRAF-mutant melanoma. 1750 27
Melanocytic lesions, including Spitz
nevi
(SN), common benign nevi (CBN) and cutaneous metastatic melanoma (CMM), were analyzed for activating mutations in
NRAS
, HRAS and BRAF oncogenes, which induce cellular proliferation via the MAP kinase pathway. One of 22 (4.5%) SN tested showed an HRAS G61L mutation. Another lesion, a 'halo' SN, showed a BRAF V600E (T1796A) mutation. BRAF V600E mutations were found in two thirds (20/31) of CBN, while a further 19% (6/31) showed
NRAS
codon 61 mutations. One third of CMM (10/30) had various BRAF mutations of codon 600, and a further 6% (2/31) showed
NRAS
codon 61 mutations. Seventeen SN tested for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at 9p and 10q regions, known to be frequently deleted in melanoma, showed LOH at the 9p loci D9S942 and IFNA. A further lesion was found with low-level microsatellite instability at one locus, D10S214. The low rate of RAS-RAF mutations (2/22, 9.1%) observed in SN suggests that these lesions harbor as yet undetected activating mutations in other components of the RAS-RAF-MEK-ERK-MAPK pathway. Germline DNA from members of 111 multiple-case melanoma families, representing a range of known (CDKN2A) and unknown predisposing gene defects, was analyzed for germline BRAF mutations, but none was found.
...
PMID:Low prevalence of RAS-RAF-activating mutations in Spitz melanocytic nevi compared with other melanocytic lesions. 1751 71
BRAF(V600E) mutation has been frequently reported in different types of melanocytic lesions, but its role in melanomagenesis is poorly understood, having been associated with either the proliferative-induced MAPK pathway activation or the acquisition of oncogene-driven senescence. The presence of BRAF alterations has been related to sun exposure, although the molecular mechanisms underlying this event are only partly known. To elucidate the relationships among BRAF/
NRAS
alterations, MAPK pathway activation, and sun exposure, we examined 22 acquired
nevi
and 18 cutaneus melanomas from 38 patients. Microdissected tissues from each lesion were subjected to BRAF/
NRAS
mutation analysis by sequencing, allele-specific PCR and pyrosequencing assay. The same lesions were also examined for the expression of phosphorylated ERK1/2. Phototype and an accurate history of sun exposure were evaluated for each patient. BRAF(V600E) mutation was detected in 50% of the acquired
nevi
and in 70% of the cutaneus melanomas in the absence of
NRAS
alterations. The fraction of alleles carrying BRAF(V600E) substitution was variable but strongly associated with sun exposure. In contrast, no relationship was evidenced between the presence of this mutation and patients' phototype, phosphorylated ERK1/2 expression, or Clark's level. Our findings indicate that in melanocytic lesions, BRAF(V600E) mutation can affect a subset of the cells and is associated with the type and quantity of sun exposure. This mutation is independent of the nevo-melanoma progression and unrelated to ERK phosphorylation, suggesting that alternative mechanisms to the MAPK activation are also involved in this type of transformation.
...
PMID:In melanocytic lesions the fraction of BRAF V600E alleles is associated with sun exposure but unrelated to ERK phosphorylation. 1840 59
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