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Query: UMLS:C0033036 (
APC
)
10,214
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The gene for familial adenomatous polyposis coli (
APC
or FAP), which has previously been linked to chromosome 5q21 has been identified. The
APC
gene has been found to be altered by point mutations in the germ line of both adenomatous polyposis coli and Gardner's syndrome patients and somatically in tumors from sporadic colorectal cancer patients. During the hunt for the
APC
gene, the closely linked MCC (mutated in colorectal cancer) gene was identified and found to be altered somatically in tumors from sporadic cancer patients. These data suggest that more than one gene on chromosome 5q21 may contribute to colorectal carcinogenesis and that mutations at the
APC
gene can cause both adenomatous polyposis coli and Gardner's syndrome. The identification of these genes should aid in the counseling of patients with genetic predispositions to colorectal cancer. Progress has also been made in identifying specific genetic changes that occur in other gastrointestinal cancers. A mutational "hotspot" in the
p53
gene in human hepatocellular carcinomas has been identified that could reflect exposure to a specific carcinogen, one candidate being aflatoxin B1.
...
PMID:Cell and molecular biology of gastrointestinal tract cancer. 132 39
Carcinogenesis is a multistage process that has been characterized both by the activation of cellular oncogenes and by the loss of function of tumor suppressor genes. Colorectal cancer has been associated with the activation of ras oncogenes and with the deletion of multiple chromosomal regions including chromosomes 5q, 17p, and 18q. Such chromosome loss is often suggestive of the deletion or loss of function of tumor suppressor genes. The candidate tumor suppressor genes from these regions are, respectively, MCC and/or
APC
,
p53
, and DCC. In order to further our understanding of the molecular and genetic mechanisms involved in tumor progression and, thereby, of normal cell growth, it is important to determine whether defects in one or more of these loci contribute functionally in the progression to malignancy in colorectal cancer and whether correction of any of these defects restores normal growth control in vitro and in vivo. To address this question, we have utilized the technique of microcell-mediated chromosome transfer to introduce normal human chromosomes 5, 17, and 18 individually into recipient colorectal cancer cells. Additionally, chromosome 15 was introduced into SW480 cells as an irrelevant control chromosome. While the introduction of chromosome 17 into the tumorigenic colorectal cell line SW480 yielded no viable clones, cell lines were established after the introduction of chromosomes 15, 5, and 18. Hybrids containing chromosome 18 are morphologically similar to the parental line, whereas those containing chromosome 5 are morphologically distinct from the parental cell line, being small, polygonal, and tightly packed. SW480-chromosome 5 hybrids are strongly suppressed for tumorigenicity, while SW480-chromosome 18 hybrids produce slowly growing tumors in some of the animals injected. Hybrids containing the introduced chromosome 18 but was significantly reduced in several of the tumor reconstitute cell lines. Introduction of chromosome 5 had little to no effect on responsiveness, whereas transfer ot chromosome 18 restored responsiveness to some degree. Our findings indicate that while multiple defects in tumor suppressor genes seem to be required for progression to the malignant state in colorectal cancer, correction of only a single defect can have significant effects in vivo and/or in vitro.
...
PMID:Progression of colorectal cancer is associated with multiple tumor suppressor gene defects but inhibition of tumorigenicity is accomplished by correction of any single defect via chromosome transfer. 134 43
Loss of heterozygosity occurring on various chromosomes has been described in the majority of human tumors. The targets of frequent or consistent subchromosomal deletions are believed to be tumor suppressor genes. We examined 72 esophageal tumors (46 squamous cell carcinomas and 26 adenocarcinomas) for loss of heterozygosity at the
p53
, Rb,
APC
, MCC, and DCC loci. Inclusion of these tumor suppressor genes in the allelic deletions was directly ascertained by performing polymerase chain reaction at polymorphic sites within the genes. Loss of heterozygosity occurred in 55% of informative cases at
p53
, in 48% of informative cases at Rb, in 66% at
APC
, in 63% at MCC, and in 24% at DCC. Ninety-three % of tumors informative at all loci (fully informative) lost heterozygosity of at least one locus. A high percentage of fully informative tumors (71%) also lost heterozygosity at more than one locus. There were no significant differences among histological types in the prevalence of loss of heterozygosity at any locus. There were correlations of losses involving MCC versus DCC, Rb, and
p53
. These data suggest that (a) allelic deletions including these tumor suppressor genes are important in the formation and/or progression of most esophageal cancers; (b) allelic deletions involving MCC may not occur independently of deletions involving other tumor suppressor genes; and (c) the accumulation of multiple allelic deletions involving specific tumor suppressor genes may be important in most esophageal tumorigenesis or tumor evolution.
...
PMID:Loss of heterozygosity involves multiple tumor suppressor genes in human esophageal cancers. 142 99
Tumorigenesis is thought to be a multistep process in which genetic alterations accumulate to bring about the neoplastic phenotype. Colorectal tumors appear to arise as a result of the mutational activation of oncogenes coupled with the inactivation of several tumor suppressor genes. We have found frequent allelic deletions of specific portions of chromosomes 5, 17, and 18 which presumably harbor suppressor genes. The target of allelic loss events on chromosome 17 has been shown to be the
p53
gene, which is frequently mutated not only in colon cancer but in several other tumor types as well. Candidate suppressor genes have also recently been identified on chromosomes 18 and 5. The DCC gene on chromosome 18q encodes a protein with significant sequence similarity to neural cell adhesion molecules and other related cell surface glycoproteins. Alterations of this gene may interfere with normal cell growth and differentiation by disrupting cell-cell or cell-substrate interactions. Two genes (MCC and
APC
) on chromosome 5q have also recently been identified and partially cloned. These genes are located in a region tightly linked to familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP). While MCC mutations have been found only in sporadic colon tumors,
APC
mutations have been identified in sporadic tumors as well as the germline of patients with FAP. Studies are currently in progress to increase our understanding of how alterations of these genes affect colorectal tumor cell growth.
...
PMID:Suppressor gene alterations in the colorectal adenoma-carcinoma sequence. 146 93
The molecular genetic alterations in colorectal carcinoma are among the best understood of any common human cancer. Identified abnormalities include both dominant-acting oncogenes (ras, myc, src) and suppressor genes which undergo inactivation or deletion (deleted in colorectal carcinoma gene [DCC],
p53
, adenomatous polyposis coli gene [
APC
], and probably loci on chromosomes 1p and 22q). Accumulation of multiple abnormalities is evident in the adenoma-carcinoma sequence with a preferential order, and alteration of DNA methylation is an especially early event. Identification of molecular genetic markers useful for classification and staging of colorectal carcinoma is in its infancy. Deletion of the
p53
gene on chromosome 17p, deletion of the DCC gene on 18q, and high fractional allelic loss (fraction of evaluable nonacrocentric autosomal arms with deletion) have been associated with distant metastases and with poorer prognosis in patients without initial evidence of disseminated disease. Additional studies are needed to determine the possible role of these alterations in clinical management.
...
PMID:Molecular genetic alterations as potential prognostic indicators in colorectal carcinoma. 154 Sep
Simian virus 40 (SV40) transformed V 11 F 1 clone 1 subclone 7 rat cells (subclone 7) do not synthesize normal-size large T antigen (M(r), 90,000); instead, they produce a 115,000 M(r) super T antigen (115K super T antigen). This super T antigen is SV40 virus coded, and its synthesis results from rearrangement and amplification of integrated viral DNA sequences in subclone 7 (May et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 9:4111-4128, 1981). In this study the functional activities of 115K super T antigen were compared with the functional activities of SV40 large T antigen. Transfection experiments were performed with (i) cosmid
SVE
5 Kb and plasmid pSVsT, both containing the super T antigen gene and (ii) plasmids pSV1 and pSV40, both containing the large T antigen gene. Transfection of pSVsT DNA or
SVE
5 Kb DNA into secondary cultures of rat kidney cells induced the formation of transformed cell foci with an efficiency that was about 50% of the efficiency of pSV1 DNA or pSV40 DNA. Concomitant with the transforming activity, two other activities were also retained by super T antigen, namely, the ability to enhance the level of host cellular
protein p53
and the capacity to bind to
p53
. In contrast, pSVsT and
SVE
5 Kb DNAs were markedly deficient in the capacity to support tsA58 DNA replication in CV1-P cells at a nonpermissive temperature (41 degrees C), as shown by cotransfection experiments. The yield of virus produced in these experiments was 400-fold less than the yield obtained in parallel experiments with pSV40 or pSV1. However,
SVE
5 Kb and pSVsT have a functional SV40 replication origin, as shown by their efficient replication in COS 1 cells which provided functional large T antigen. Super T antigen also possesses a specific affinity for sequences of SV40 viral origin. Our results suggest that under certain conditions, evolutionary changes in T antigen take place and that these changes could be restricted to the phenotypic requirement of maintaining a structure that is able to induce cell transformation, to form a complex with
p53
, and to enhance the cellular level of
p53
. Therefore, there appears to be a close relationship among the activities of T antigen involved in transforming cells, in binding to
p53
, and in enhancing the
p53
cellular level. Moreover, this set of activities appears to be separable from the replicative ability of T antigen, based on the observation that 115K super T antigen is markedly defective for initiating viral DNA synthesis.
...
PMID:Study of the functional activities concomitantly retained by the 115,000 Mr super T antigen, an evolutionary variant of simian virus 40 large T antigen expressed in transformed rat cells. 630 Apr 61
Murine strains which bear constitutive inactivating mutations of either the
APC
or the
p53 tumor suppressor
genes are characterised by spontaneous tumors.
APC
mutated (Min) mice develop large and small bowel adenomas, a small proportion of which, in time, become malignant.
p53
deficient mice develop predominantly lymphoma and sarcoma. By interbreeding these strains we have shown that there is co-operativity between these mutations, leading to a shift in phenotype. Most notably, this was characterised by a range of abnormalities of the exocrine pancreas in 83% of animals heterozygous for the
APC
mutation and constitutively null for functional
p53
. Dysplasia and preneoplastic foci were seen in 61% of these animals and pancreatic acinar cell adenocarcinoma in 22%. Analysis of these tumors showed them to have lost the remaining wild-type copy of
APC
. Similar loss of
APC
was not associated with the development of other extra-intestinal tumors. Surprisingly, given the proposed role for loss of function mutations of the
p53
gene in the development of human colorectal cancer, we have found no evidence for either an increase in the rate of adenoma formation in
APC
+/-,
p53
-/- animals, or an increased rate of progression to malignancy compared with
APC
+/-
p53
+/+ mice. These findings highlight striking tissue-specific differences in the tumor suppressor effects of
p53
.
...
PMID:Interaction between murine germline mutations in p53 and APC predisposes to pancreatic neoplasia but not to increased intestinal malignancy. 747 22
We present a restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of 29 benign and 30 malignant prostatic tumors, using polymorphic DNA probes to the putative tumor suppressor genes DCC (Deleted in Colorectal Carcinoma; chromosome 18q21.3), nm23-H1 (17q21.3),
APC
(Adenomatous Polyposis Coli; 5q21) and
p53
(17p13). Six of 23 evaluable cancers (26%) showed loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at DCC; 5 were advanced stage and one was clinically localized (p < 0.05). Mapping 18q deletions, another (advanced) cancer showed LOH at a locus distal to DCC (18q22), but no LOH at DCC. Three of 15 evaluable cancers (20%), all advanced, showed LOH at
APC
. Three of eight (38%) cancers, of which 2 were advanced, showed LOH at
p53
. One high grade/stage cancer of 21 (5%) showed LOH at nm23-H1 (and also at DCC). Combining data, allelic losses at either DCC,
APC
, or
p53
genes were seen in 13% of localized cancers, but in 71% of advanced cancers (p < 0.002). Allelic loss involving nm23-H1 is rare in prostatic carcinoma. We suggest that loss of tumor suppressor genes DCC and/or an unidentified gene located distally on chromosome 18q,
APC
, or
p53
may influence progression in prostatic carcinoma.
...
PMID:Somatic allelic loss at the DCC, APC, nm23-H1 and p53 tumor suppressor gene loci in human prostatic carcinoma. 751 Mar 45
Neoplastic progression of colorectal epithelial cells from benign adenomas to malignant carcinomas appears to result from a series of genetic alterations involving both oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. This progression was recently found to be associated with expression of splice variant isoforms of CD44, a cell surface hyaluronate receptor implicated in carcinogenesis. In this study we examined the relationship of CD44 expression to somatic genetic events in the adenoma-carcinoma sequence: point mutation of K-ras in codons 12 and 13 and overexpression of
p53 protein
as a marker of gene mutation. Among 22 small adenomas, CD44 was present in 9 (41%), of which only 1 contained a K-ras mutation. CD44 was absent in the other 2 small adenomas positive for K-ras mutation or
p53
overexpression. In contrast to the early expression of CD44 in small adenomas, mutations of K-ras and
p53
were detected preferentially in large adenomas and late-stage adenomas containing carcinoma. The frequent expression of CD44 prior to K-ras and
p53
gene alterations in colorectal neoplasia suggests that activation of CD44 gene expression is related to earlier events in the adenoma-carcinoma sequence, possibly cell activation and proliferation following
APC
gene mutation or alteration of DNA methylation.
...
PMID:CD44 expression in colorectal adenomas is an early event occurring prior to K-ras and p53 gene mutation. 751 84
To investigate genetic features of esophageal cancer, we have examined 93 squamous cell carcinomas of the esophagus for loss of heterozygosity (LOH), using 41 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) markers representing all autosomal chromosomes. Allelic losses at frequencies of at least 30% were observed at loci on chromosomal arms 3p (35%), 3q (30%), 5q (36%), 9p (57%), 9q (60%), 10p (33%), 13q (43%), 17p (62%), 17q (46%), 18q (38%), 19q (32%), and 21q (37%). These results suggest that several putative tumor suppressor genes, in addition to the cyclin D and
TP53
genes that are sometimes mutated in esophageal carcinomas, may be associated with development and/or progression of esophageal cancer. By a comparison of LOH on each chromosomal arm with clinicopathological parameters, we have found a significant correlation between LOH on 19q and regional lymph node metastases. Interestingly, the frequency of LOH on 17q was significantly higher in tumors in female patients (12 of 14 cases) than in those in male patients (20 of 56 cases) (P = 0.0009 by Fisher's exact test). Furthermore, we examined for mutations of the
APC
gene on chromosome arm 5q. Screening of nearly one third of the
APC
coding region, including the MCR (mutation cluster region), revealed no alterations. Therefore, although allelic loss at the
APC
locus is frequent in squamous cell carcinomas of the esophagus, it is likely that a gene on 5q other than
APC
is involved in esophageal tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Allelotype study of esophageal carcinoma. 752 40
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