Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0033036 (APC)
10,214 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a distinct tumour phenotype that is associated with alterations of DNA mismatch repair and is being increasingly reported in a number of hereditary and sporadic tumours. Numerous reports have suggested that melanocytic neoplasms, including cutaneous melanomas, frequently demonstrate low frequency MSI, whilst a small number of tumours exhibit high frequency MSI. Furthermore, loss of expression of DNA mismatch repair proteins has been associated with progression from benign to malignant disease in melanocytic neoplasms, but the presence or absence of mismatch repair defects in uveal melanomas has yet to be determined. This study was designed to establish whether MSI is a feature of these ocular melanomas. To investigate the prevalence of MSI in uveal melanomas, 52 tumours were analysed by polymerase chain reaction amplification of a panel of microsatellite markers selected for their ability to detect tumours exhibiting defects in DNA mismatch repair mechanisms. MSI was rarely detected in the 52 uveal melanomas analysed. All tumours demonstrated stable microsatellites at five of the six microsatellite markers tested (BAT26, BAT40, APC, D2S123 and Mfd15CA). Only one tumour showed the presence of a single unstable allele at a tetranucleotide marker (MYCL1). These data suggest that high frequency MSI does not occur in these tumours, and that low frequency MSI, in contrast to cutaneous melanoma, is a rare event in malignant melanomas of the uveal tract.
...
PMID:Instability of microsatellites is an infrequent event in uveal melanoma. 1451 84

Medulloblastomas and supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumors are aggressive childhood tumors. We report our findings using array comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) on a whole-genome BAC/PAC/cosmid array with a median clone separation of 0.97 Mb to study 34 medulloblastomas and 7 supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumors. Array CGH allowed identification and mapping of numerous novel, small regions of copy number change to genomic sequence in addition to the large regions already known from previous studies. Novel amplifications were identified, some encompassing oncogenes MYCL1, PDGFRA, KIT, and MYB not previously reported to show amplification in these tumors. In addition, one supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumor had lost both copies of the tumor-suppressor genes CDKN2A and CDKN2B. Ten medulloblastomas had findings suggestive of isochromosome 17q. In contrast to previous reports using conventional CGH, array CGH identified 3 distinct breakpoints in these cases: Ch 17: 17940393-19251679 (17p11.2, n = 6), Ch 17: 20111990-23308272 (17p11.2-17q11.2, n = 4), and Ch 17: 38425359-39091575 (17q21.31, n = 1). Significant differences were found in the patterns of copy number change between medulloblastomas and supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumors, providing further evidence that these tumors are genetically distinct despite their morphologic and behavioral similarities.
...
PMID:High-resolution array-based comparative genomic hybridization of medulloblastomas and supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumors. 1678 65