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Query: UMLS:C0033036 (
APC
)
10,214
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although it is widely accepted that tumor suppressor genes play an important role in the genesis and progression of human cancer, little is known about genetic events that accumulate during multistage lung carcinogenesis. Thus, to determine a subset of tumor suppressor genes that are involved in the genesis and progression of non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), 22 brain metastases and 23 stage I primary lung tumors were examined for allelic losses at 40 loci on 10 chromosomes including the loci of 5 tumor suppressor genes,
APC
,
WT1
, RB, p53, and DCC. The incidence of allelic losses on chromosomes 3p, 13q, and 17p was high (> 60%) in both primary tumors and brain metastases. In brain metastases, a high incidence of allelic losses (> 60%) was also observed at loci on chromosomes 2q, 18q, and 22q, and the incidence of allelic losses on these chromosomes in brain metastases was significantly higher than that in primary tumors (P < 0.05). In two cases of brain metastases with corresponding primary lung tumors, sequential accumulation of allelic losses during progression of primary lung tumors was observed on several chromosomes including chromosomes 2q and 18q. These results indicate that, besides loss of heterozygosity for chromosomes 3p, 13q, and 17p, loss of heterozygosity for chromosomes 2q, 18q, and 22q also occurs frequently in advanced NSCLCS. Thus, it is possible that loss of heterozygosity on chromosomes 2q, 18q, and 22q occurs late in the progression of NSCLC and/or causes phenotypic alterations of NSCLC cells into more aggressive ones.
...
PMID:Frequent allelic losses on chromosomes 2q, 18q, and 22q in advanced non-small cell lung carcinoma. 792 10
We report here the use of multiplex fluorescent polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for quantitative allele loss detection using microsatellites with 2-5 base pair repeat motifs. Allele loss of
APC
, DCC, p53 and RB1 in colorectal tumours has been reported previously using a variety of methods. However, not all workers used intragenic markers. We have used microsatellite polymorphisms which map within, or are closely linked to, these tumour-suppressor gene loci in order to determine whether these loci are indeed the targets for alteration in colorectal cancer. In addition, we have assayed two other tumour-suppressor genes,
WT1
and NF1, to see whether they play a role in colorectal carcinogenesis. The putative metastasis-suppressor gene, NM23, was also investigated since there have been conflicting reports about its involvement in colorectal carcinogenesis. Allele loss was detected at the DCC (29%), p53 (66%), RB1 (50%) and NF1 (14%) loci and in the
APC
/MCC region (50%), but not at the
WT1
or NM23 loci. These rapid, and mostly gene-specific, fluorescent multiplex PCR assays for allele loss detection could be modified to devise a single molecular diagnostic test for the important lesions in colorectal cancer.
...
PMID:Frequency of allele loss of DCC, p53, RBI, WT1, NF1, NM23 and APC/MCC in colorectal cancer assayed by fluorescent multiplex polymerase chain reaction. 794 85
The B6C3F1 mouse is used worldwide to gauge the carcinogenic hazard posed by chemicals to humans. An assessment of the ability of this rodent model to predict human neoplasia requires an evaluation of similarities and differences in the genetics of tumor formation between these two species. We examined 142 spontaneous and chemically-induced liver tumors isolated from the B6C3F1 mouse for losses of heterozygosity (LOH) at 78 polymorphic loci and compared these results to genetic changes known to occur in human hepatocellular carcinoma. Approximately a third of the 142 mouse tumors exhibited LOH, suggesting that tumor suppressor gene inactivation may be involved in the formation of mouse liver tumors. Most of the LOH observed was restricted to seven chromosome sites and most of the tumors that underwent LOH lost alleles from only one of those seven sites. The relatively few losses seen in these mouse tumors distinguished them from clinical stage human tumors in that, in the mouse tumors, interstitial deletions appeared more frequently than losses of whole chromosomes. Only four mouse tumors lost a whole chromosome. LOH occurred at loci of the mouse genome syntenic to areas of the human genome known to harbor the
Wilms
', retinoblastoma,
APC
, MCC and DCC tumor suppressor genes; these genes have never been associated with hepatocellular carcinomas. Losses observed on chromosomes 5 and 8 (syntenic to human chromosomes 4 and 16) suggest tumor suppressor genes that are common to hepatocellular carcinomas from both species, while losses on chromosome 9 suggest involvement of a previously unidentified tumor suppressor gene.
...
PMID:Loss of heterozygosity in spontaneous and chemically induced tumors of the B6C3F1 mouse. 805 44
Fluorescent polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to assay 12 microsatellite markers (
APC
x 2, DCC, P53 x 2, RB1, NM23,
WT1
, D6S260, D6S262, D6S281 and TNFa) to look for evidence of microsatellite instability in 40 cases of follicle centre cell lymphoma (FCC). Evidence of novel alleles seen in the tumour tissue but not the normal uninvolved tissue was seen in seven cases (17%). In only two of these cases (5%) was more than one locus involved but in these cases multiple affected loci were seen (4/12 and 7/12 respectively). The detection of microsatellite instability indicates a DNA repair defect such as that which would be predicted to occur in cells with mutated mismatch repair genes, a novel finding in FCC lymphoma.
...
PMID:Microsatellite instability in follicle centre cell lymphoma. 861 53
We have examined 41 cases of follicle centre cell lymphoma with fluorescent PCR of microsatellite repeats closely linked to or within six tumour suppressor gene loci (
APC
, DCC, P53, RB1,
WT1
and NM23). These probes are highly informative with heterozygousity rates in the range of 57%-90%. In addition we have used four loci from chromosome 6 (D6S260, TNFa, D6S281 and D6S262) as control loci which are unlikely to be involved in the pathogenesis of lymphoma. Of 369 informative PCR reactions allele imbalance was identified in 38 (10%) and this was seen in 23 of the 41 cases. Looking at individual loci allele imbalance was seen in
APC
(1) 11%,
APC
(2) 12%, P53(1) 5%, P53 (2) 7%,
WT1
5%, RB1 13%, DCC 18% and NM23 0%. This frequency of change was no different from that seen at the control loci D6S260 16%, TNFa 20%, D6S281 4% and D6S262 9%. In the indolent phase of germinal centre cell lymphoma there is therefore quite a high rate of allele imbalance at all loci but this is no higher in those loci linked to tumour suppressor genes.
...
PMID:Allele imbalance at tumour suppressor loci during the indolent phase of follicle centre cell lymphoma. 872 37
Identification of inherited cancer-predisposing genes offers opportunities for cancer prevention. Inherited susceptibility genes have been identified, primarily through studies of unusual cancer cases and families but also through general population studies. Examples include the RB1 gene for retinoblastoma; the
WT1
gene for
Wilms' tumor
; germline p53 mutations in families with the Li-Fraumeni syndrome; the NF1 and NF2 genes for neuroblastomatosis, types 1 and 2; the VHL gene for renal cancer and other tumors associated with Von Hippel-Lindau disease; the
APC
gene for adenomatous polyposis coli; the BRCA1 gene for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer; and the mismatch repair genes for colon and other common cancers. For some cancers, identification of gene carriers might be beneficial for targeting screening and chemopreventive interventions. On the other hand, predisposition testing for cancer has the potential for harm from loss of insurability and employability, psychological distress, social stigmatization and other adverse effects. Research is needed to identify predisposition testing procedures that maximize benefits while minimizing harm to subjects. Chemoprevention trials in genetically susceptible populations offer the prospect of finding effective methods of reducing future cancer risk.
...
PMID:Identification and management of inherited cancer susceptibility. 874 2
We have constructed a 1-Mb contig in human chromosomal band 11p15.5, a region implicated in the etiology of several embryonal tumors, including
Wilms tumor
, and in Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome. Cosmid, P1,
PAC
, and BAC clones were characterized by NotI/SalI digestion and hybridized to a variety of probes to generate a detailed physical map that extends from D11S517 to L23MRP. Included in the map are the CARS, NAP2, p57/KIP2, KVLQT1, ASCL2, TH, INS, IGF2, H19, and L23MRP genes as well as end probes isolated from PACs. The TAPA1 gene, whose protein product can transmit an antiproliferative signal, was also localized in the contig. However, Northern blot analysis demonstrated that its expression did not correlate with tumorigenicity in G401
Wilms tumor
hybrids, suggesting that TAPA1 is not responsible for the tumor suppression associated with 11p15.5. Genomic clones were used as probes in FISH analysis to map the breakpoints from three Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome patients and a rhabdoid tumor. Interestingly, each of the breakpoints disrupts the KVLQT1 gene, which is spread over a 400-kb region of the contig. Since 11p15.5 contains several genes with imprinted expression and one or more tumor suppressor genes, our contig and map provide a framework for characterizing this intriguing genetic environment.
...
PMID:A 1-Mb physical map and PAC contig of the imprinted domain in 11p15.5 that contains TAPA1 and the BWSCR1/WT2 region. 926 40
Recent knowledge about biological role of tumor suppressor genes and their products: RB1, p53,
WT1
, DCC,
APC
/FAP, NF1, NF2, VHL, MCC and MTS1 is presented. The main approaches of these agents as physiological regulators of cell growth and proliferation are discussed. Views on the tumor suppressor genes involvement in the development of inherited and sporadic forms of cancer have been reviewed.
...
PMID:[Antioncogenes--tumor suppression genes]. 933 80
Fanconi anemia (FA) is a genetically heterogeneous autosomal recessive syndrome associated with chromosomal instability, hypersensitivity to DNA crosslinking agents, and predisposition to malignancy. The gene for FA complementation group A (FAA) recently has been cloned. The cDNA is predicted to encode a polypeptide of 1,455 amino acids, with no homologies to any known protein that might suggest a function for FAA. We have used single-strand conformational polymorphism analysis to screen genomic DNA from a panel of 97 racially and ethnically diverse FA patients from the International Fanconi Anemia Registry for mutations in the FAA gene. A total of 85 variant bands were detected. Forty-five of the variants are probably benign polymorphisms, of which nine are common and can be used for various applications, including mapping studies for other genes in this region of chromosome 16q. Amplification refractory mutation system assays were developed to simplify their detection. Forty variants are likely to be pathogenic mutations. Seventeen of these are microdeletions/microinsertions associated with short direct repeats or homonucleotide tracts, a type of mutation thought to be generated by a mechanism of slipped-strand mispairing during DNA replication. A screening of 350 FA probands from the International Fanconi Anemia Registry for two of these deletions (1115-1118del and 3788-3790del) revealed that they are carried on about 2% and 5% of the FA alleles, respectively. 3788-3790del appears in a variety of ethnic groups and is found on at least two different haplotypes. We suggest that FAA is hypermutable, and that slipped-strand mispairing, a mutational mechanism recognized as important for the generation of germ-line and somatic mutations in a variety of cancer-related genes, including p53,
APC
, RB1,
WT1
, and BRCA1, may be a major mechanism for FAA mutagenesis.
...
PMID:Sequence variation in the Fanconi anemia gene FAA. 937 98
11p15.5 is an important tumor-suppressor gene region, showing loss of heterozygosity in
Wilms tumor
, rhabdomyosarcoma, adrenocortical carcinoma, and lung, ovarian, and breast cancer. We previously mapped directly by genetic complementation a subtransferable fragment (STF) harboring an embryonal tumor-suppressor gene and spanning about 2.5 Mb. We have now mapped the centromeric end of this STF between D11S988 and D11S12 and its telomeric end between D11S1318 and TH. We have isolated a complete contig of
PAC
, P1, BAC, and cosmid genomic clones spanning the entire 2.5-Mb region defined by this STF, as well as more than 200 exons from these genomic clones using exon trapping. We have isolated genes in this region by directly screening DNA libraries as well as by database searching for ESTs. Nine of these genes have been reported previously by us and by others. However, the initial mapping of most of those genes was based on FISH or somatic cell hybrid analysis, and here we precisely define their physical location. These genes include RRM1, GOK (D11S4896E), Nup98, CARS, hNAP2 (NAP1L4), p57KIP2 (CDKN1C), KVLQT1 (KCNA9), TAPA-1, and ASCL2. In addition, we have identified several novel genes in this region, three of which, termed TSSC1, TSSC2, and TSSC3, are reported here. TSSC1 shows homology to Rb-associated protein p48 and chromatin assembly factor CAF1, and it is located between GOK and Nup98. TSSC2 is homologous to Caenorhabditis elegans beta-mannosyl transferase, and it lies between Nup98 and CARS. TSSC3 shows homology to mouse TDAG51, which is implicated in FasL-mediated apoptosis, and it is located between hNAP2 and p57KIP2. Thus, these genes may play a role in malignancies that involve this region.
...
PMID:A 2.5-Mb transcript map of a tumor-suppressing subchromosomal transferable fragment from 11p15.5, and isolation and sequence analysis of three novel genes. 940 53
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