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Query: UMLS:C0033036 (
APC
)
10,214
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Identification of germline mutations that may modulate individual risk of developing cancer is a rapidly developing field. Over the last few decades, germline mutations in p53,
BRCA1
, BRCA2,
APC
, MLH1, MSH2, and MSH6 have been identified in families with a large number of relatives who have been diagnosed with particular types of cancer. These mutations are rare but substantially increase the risk of cancer in carriers, and account for a small fraction of cancer cases diagnosed in the general population. The search for common mutations that correlate with a very modest increased risk of developing cancer is ongoing. With the completion of the Human Genome Project, a large array of methods to identify these genes and their variants are under development. The following chapter describes methods to provide evidence of a genetic component associated with disease risk, how to identify chromosomal regions of interest to identify rare but highly penetrant genetic variants, and methods used to identify more common mutations which modulate cancer development.
...
PMID:Study designs in genetic epidemiology. 1938 60
Diffuse type gastric carcinoma is the most aggressive type of gastric cancer. This type of tumor is not preceded by precancerous changes and is associated with early-onset and hereditary syndromes. To test the hypothesis that DNA methylation profile would be useful for molecular classification of the diffuse type gastric carcinoma, DNA methylation patterns of the CpG Island of 17 genes were studied in 104 cases and 47 normal adjacent gastric mucosa by Methylation-specific PCR, Immunohistochemistry and Hierarchical clustering analysis. The most frequent methylated genes were FHIT, E-cadherin,
BRCA1
and
APC
(>50%), followed by p14, p16, p15, p73, MGMT and SEMA3B (20-49%). Hierarchical clustering analysis reveals four groups with different clinical features. The first was characterized by hypermethylation of
BRCA1
and younger age (<45 years old), and the second by hypermethylation of p14 and p16 genes, male predominance and Epstein-Barr virus infection. The third group was characterized by hypermethylation of FHIT and antrum located tumors and the fourth was not associated with any clinical variables. In normal adjacent mucosa only the p73 gene was significantly less methylated in comparison to tumor mucosa. DNA methylation identified subgroups of diffuse type gastric cancer. Hypermethylation of
BRCA1
associated with young age suggests a role in early-onset gastric carcinoma.
...
PMID:DNA methylation profile in diffuse type gastric cancer: evidence for hypermethylation of the BRCA1 promoter region in early-onset gastric carcinogenesis. 1939 43
Alterations of DNA methylation patterns have been suggested as biomarkers for diagnostics and therapy of cancers. Every novel discovery in the epigenetic landscape and every development of an improved approach for accurate analysis of the events may offer new opportunity for the management of patients. Using a novel high-throughput mass spectrometry on matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) silico-chips, we determined semiquantitative methylation changes of 22 candidate genes in breast cancer tissues. For the first time we analysed the methylation status of a total of 42 528 CpG dinucleotides on 22 genes in 96 different paraffin-embedded tissues (48 breast cancerous tissues and 48 paired normal tissues). A two-way hierarchical cluster analysis was used to classify methylation profiles. In this study, 10 hypermethylated genes (
APC
, BIN1, BMP6,
BRCA1
, CST6, ESRb, GSTP1, P16, P21 and TIMP3) were identified to distinguish between cancerous and normal tissues according to the extent of methylation. Individual assessment of the methylation status for each CpG dinucleotide indicated that cytosine hypermethylation in the cancerous tissue samples was mostly located near the consensus sequences of the transcription factor binding sites. These hypermethylated genes may serve as biomarkers for clinical molecular diagnosis and targeted treatments of patients with breast cancer.
...
PMID:Methylation profiles of 22 candidate genes in breast cancer using high-throughput MALDI-TOF mass array. 1950 99
The promyelocytic leukemia (PML) gene is an important tumor suppressor gene. We tested the hypothesis that germline disruption of the PML gene may be associated with a cancer predisposition syndrome. Mutation analysis of the PML gene was performed in 111 patients with familial adult cancer or young age-onset adult cancer. These were mostly breast and colon cancer, or colon polyposis patients in whom mutation analyses of the
BRCA1
, BRCA2, MLH1, MSH2,
APC
or TP53 genes did not detect a pathogenic germline mutation. Heteroduplex analysis and direct sequencing were used for mutation screening. Mutation-specific methods were designed for frequency determination of novel variants in the general population. No deleterious nonsense or frameshift germline mutations were detected. Several missense single-nucleotide substitutions were found, including two novel missense variants, c.83C>T (p.Thr28Ile) in exon 1 in a 42-year-old breast cancer patient and c.1558C>T (p.Pro520Ser) in exon 6 in a 32-year-old colon cancer patient, that were not detected in 100 and 214 non-cancer persons, respectively. Frequency of the c.2260G>C (p.Ala754Pro) variant in isoform IV of the PML gene was higher in patients with colon polyposis and cancer than in the control group (P = 0.029). In conclusion, germline disruption of the PML gene is probably not associated with a highly penetrant susceptibility to adult-onset breast and colon cancer. Pathogenicity of c.83C>T and c.1558C>T variants in the PML gene is uncertain. Carriers of the c.2260 G>C variant in PMLIV isoform may be at an increased risk of colon polyposis and cancer.
...
PMID:Germline variants of the promyelocytic leukemia tumor suppressor gene in patients with familial cancer. 1972 58
To better understand breast cancer etiology and progression, we explored the association between promoter methylation status of three breast cancer-related genes (
BRCA1
,
APC
, and p16) and survival in a large cohort of women with breast cancer. About 800 archived tumor tissues were collected from women diagnosed with a first primary invasive or in situ breast cancer in 1996-1997. The vital status of the participants was followed through the end of year 2005 with a mean follow-up time of 8.0 years. Promoter methylation was assessed by methylation-specific PCR (for
BRCA1
) and MethyLight (for
APC
and p16). The association of promoter methylation and breast cancer mortality was evaluated by Cox-proportional hazards models. Methylated promoters were found in 59.0, 48.4, and 3.6% of the tumor samples for
BRCA1
,
APC
, and p16, respectively. Breast cancer-specific mortality was strongly associated with promoter methylation of p16 [HR and 95% CI: 3.53 (1.83-6.78)], whereas the associations with of
BRCA1
and
APC
were less pronounced [HR and 95% CI: 1.81 (1.18-2.78) and 1.46 (0.98-2.17), respectively]. Similar associations were observed with all-cause mortality. As the number of methylated genes increased, the risk of breast cancer-specific mortality also increased in a dose-dependent manner (P, trend = 0.01). Importantly, even with our results stratified by hormone receptor status, promoter methylation of the three genes remained predictive of mortality. Our results suggest that promoter methylation could be promising epigenetic markers to be considered for breast cancer survival.
...
PMID:Gene promoter methylation is associated with increased mortality among women with breast cancer. 1992 26
Epidemiologic studies of twins indicate that 20-40% of common tumors such as breast, colorectal, and prostate cancers are inherited. However, the effect of high penetrance tumor susceptibility genes such as
APC
,
BRCA1
, BRAC2, MSH1, MLH2 and MSH6 only accounts for a small fraction of these cancers. Low to moderate penetrance tumor susceptibility genes likely account for the large remaining proportion of familial cancer risk. Candidate tumor susceptibility genes have been identified based on the discovery of tumor-specific mutations, in vitro experiments, as well as animal models of cancer. Translational studies based on in vitro and in vivo discoveries have led to the identification of novel phenotypes and genotypes associated with cancer in humans. Case-control studies followed by validation studies and meta-analyses have unveiled several novel tumor susceptibility genes, several of which belong to genes encoding metabolizing enzymes and genes from the TGF-beta signaling pathway. Together with genome-wide association studies, candidate gene approaches are likely to fill a large gap in our knowledge of the genetic basis of cancer within the next decade.
...
PMID:Candidate gene association studies: successes and failures. 2041 90
CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP) involves methylation targeted toward the promoters of multiple genes. We determined a methylation profile of tumor-related genes in serum of sporadic breast cancer (SBC). The multigene methylation was examined by methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction assay in serum of 50 SBCs and 50 paired nontumors, and CIMP+ was defined as having three genes that are concordantly methylated. The methylation frequency of ten genes in serum of 50 SBCs varied from 10% in FHIT to 74% in RASSF1A. The methylation status of RASSF1A,
BRCA1
, p16, CDH1, ER, RARbeta2,
APC
, and DAPK was significantly correlated with SBC and nontumor serum (P < 0.05). Methylation of at least one gene was found in 92% SBC; CIMP was more frequent in SBC than nontumor serum (P < 0.001). There was a significant association between CIMP and methylation of RASSF1A,
BRCA1
, p16, CDH1, ER, RARbeta2,
APC
, and DAPK (P < 0.05); the methylation link profile of CDH1, RASSF1A,
BRCA1
, and RARbeta2 as breast cancer marker may contribute high sensitivity (90%) and specificity (88%). ER and RARbeta2 methylation was associated with elevated serum CA153 levels in 39 SBC samples with CIMP+ (P < 0.05). Multivariate analysis showed that living area of patients was found to provide independent prognostic information associated with a relative risk of tumor recurrence of 5.3. Multigene-specific methylation profile in serum was association with the recurrence risk of rural SBC, and positive correlation of CIMP can serve as a promising molecular marker of SBC.
...
PMID:CpG island methylator phenotype of multigene in serum of sporadic breast carcinoma. 2049 Sep 64
Extract: A single inherited mutant gene may be enough to cause a very high cancer risk. Single-mutation cases have provided much insight into the genetic basis of carcinogenesis, but they are relatively rare and account for only a small fraction of all cancers. Examples include mutation to the
APC
gene, causing early onset colon cancer in the syndrome familial adenomatous polyposis (tumorous polyp-tissue in the colon); mutation to either the
BRCA1
or BRCA2 genes, causing an increased risk of breast cancer; and mutation to the TP53 gene, causing Li-Fraumeni syndrome with various early onset cancers such as bone or soft tissue sarcoma. Cancers sometimes cluster in families, but do not follow the rigid inheritance pattern characteristic of a mutation to a single gene. Males with a brother or father who has suffered prostate cancer are more likely to develop the disease. Similarly, females with a sister or mother who has suffered breast cancer are more likely to get a breast tumor. Some of the clustering may arise from the common diet and environment shared by families. Recently, however, researchers have begun to assign a significant fraction of cancer risk to the particular genetic variants that individuals inherit.
...
PMID:Inheritance of cancer. 2070 38
For most cases of colorectal cancer that arise without a family history of the disease, it is proposed that an appreciable heritable component of predisposition is the result of contributions from many loci. Although progress has been made in identifying single nucleotide variants associated with colorectal cancer risk, the involvement of low-penetrance copy number variants is relatively unexplored. We have used multiplex amplifiable probe hybridization (MAPH) in a fourfold multiplex (QuadMAPH), positioned at an average resolution of one probe per 2 kb, to screen a total of 1.56 Mb of genomic DNA for copy number variants around the genes
APC
, AXIN1,
BRCA1
, BRCA2, CTNNB1, HRAS, MLH1, MSH2, and TP53. Two deletion events were detected, one upstream of MLH1 in a control individual and the other in
APC
in a colorectal cancer patient, but these do not seem to correspond to copy number polymorphisms with measurably high population frequencies. In summary, by means of our QuadMAPH assay, copy number measurement data were of sufficient resolution and accuracy to detect any copy number variants with high probability. However, this study has demonstrated a very low incidence of deletion and duplication variants within intronic and flanking regions of these nine genes, in both control individuals and colorectal cancer patients.
...
PMID:Screening for common copy-number variants in cancer genes. 2115 52
The goal was to determine recurrent or second primary status for late stomal malignancies, 16 and 17 years post-total laryngectomy in two laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC) patients, based on DNA methylation signatures and HPV typing. Adopting a literature review based definition of late stomal recurrences as new primaries at the site of the stoma or neopharynx occurring >5 years after total laryngectomy, we employed a multi-gene candidate approach to examine promoter methylation in 24 tumor suppressor genes and PCR-based assays for HPV status offered additional insights into whether the late stomal tumors post-total laryngectomy were related or not. The primary tumor for Patient 1 was negative for HPV but had aberrant hypermethylation of
APC
, MLH1 and
BRCA1
. The stomal biopsy 17-years later showed presence of HPV-16 without any methylated genes. In Patient 2, HPV-11 and promoter methylation of
APC
identified in the primary tumor was also observed in the stomal malignancy 16 years post-total laryngectomy. Additional information provided by molecular typing for HPV and methylation markers underscored Patient 1's and 2's late stomal presentation as most likely a second primary and recurrence, respectively. DNA methylation markers are particularly advantageous because DNA methylation is an early event in tumorigenesis, and the epigenetic modification, 5-methylcytosine, is a stable marker. Molecular marks to discern genetic heterogeneity or relatedness of stomal malignancies several years post-total laryngectomy can provide clues to their status as either second primaries or likely recurrences. Our results support the hypothesis that a subset of stomal recurrences after total laryngectomy represents second primary tumors.
...
PMID:Molecular characterization of late stomal recurrence following total laryngectomy. 2122 33
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