Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0043346 (xeroderma pigmentosum)
2,924 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We reported previously that human cells after neoplastic transformation in culture had acquired an increased susceptibility to chromatid damage induced by x-irradiation during the G2 phase of the cell cycle. Evidence suggested that this results from deficient DNA repair during G2 phase. Cells derived from human tumors also showed enhanced G2-phase chromosomal radiosensitivity. Furthermore, skin fibroblasts from individuals with genetic diseases predisposing to a high risk of cancer, including ataxia-telangiectasia, Bloom syndrome, Fanconi anemia, and xeroderma pigmentosum exhibited enhanced G2-phase chromosomal radiosensitivity. The present study shows that apparently normal skin fibroblasts from individuals with familial cancer--i.e., from families with a history of neoplastic disease--also exhibit enhanced G2-phase chromosomal radiosensitivity. This radiosensitivity appears, therefore, to be associated with both a genetic predisposition to cancer and a malignant neoplastic state. Furthermore, enhanced G2-phase chromosomal radiosensitivity may provide the basis for an assay to detect genetic susceptibility to cancer.
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PMID:Chromosomal radiosensitivity during the G2 cell-cycle period of skin fibroblasts from individuals with familial cancer. 386 Aug 70

The purpose of the present study was to determine whether skin fibroblasts from individuals, either with an inherited predisposition to cancer or with genetic disorders usually associated with a high risk of cancer, can be oncogenically transformed in vitro by a tumor promoter alone. The effects of chronic and limited applications of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) on several properties that are associated with transformation were examined using skin fibroblasts from individuals with polyposis coli, a familial cancer syndrome, xeroderma pigmentosum, Fanconi's anemia, and trisomy 21. The results of this study show that TPA treatment induces similar changes on cellular morphology, growth rate, saturation density, epidermal growth factor binding, and cytoskeleton in fibroblasts from both normal and genetically predisposed individuals. None of these cell lines, however, acquired anchorage-independent growth or unlimited growth potential in culture after chronic application of TPA. These observations suggest clearly that skin fibroblasts from individuals with either a genetic predisposition to or a high risk of cancer may not exist in a preneoplastic or "initiated" state susceptible to oncogenic transformation by TPA alone and that the mechanism of genetically determined cancer induction may be different from that of chemical carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Effects of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate on fibroblasts from individuals genetically predisposed to cancer. 621 97

Basal cell carcinomas (BCCs) are the most common sporadic cancers worldwide. They are also a cardinal manifestation of a familial cancer predisposition syndrome, naevoid BCC syndrome (NBCCS). The gene responsible for NBCCS is likely to be a tumour suppressor gene and has been genetically mapped to a 2cM region between microsatellite markers, D9S196 and D9S180 at 9q22.3-q31. 101 BCCs (63 sporadic and 38 familial) were examined for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in the candidate region of the NBCCS gene. Deletions were found in 46% and all LOH is consistent with genetic mapping of the NBCC locus. These findings strongly support the hypothesis that inactivation of the putative tumour suppressor, the NBCCS gene, is important in the formation of sporadic BCCs. One sporadic tumour indicates that the smallest region of overlap of these deletions is within the interval between D9S287 and D9S180. If this is confirmed in additional tumours, it would further narrow down the NBCCS region and exclude one candidate gene, that for the C complementation group of Fanconi anaemia, which maps proximally to D9S287. However, it would not exclude another candidate, the gene for the A complementation group of xeroderma pigmentosum (XPAC). Evidence of imprinting was also sought but preliminary data indicate that it is unlikely to occur at the NBCCS locus.
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PMID:Fine deletion mapping on the long arm of chromosome 9 in sporadic and familial basal cell carcinomas. 771 24

We are presenting a case associated with papillary thyroid carcinoma, renal cell carcinoma, invasive mammary carcinoma, chondrosarcoma, benign ganglioneuroma, and numerous colon adenomas. The patient had a family history of colon cancer, kidney and bladder cancers, lung cancer, thyroid cancer, leukemia, and throat and mouth cancers. She was diagnosed with colonic villous adenoma at the age of 41 followed by thyroid, renal, and breast cancers and chondrosarcoma at the ages of 48, 64, 71, and 74, respectively. Additionally, we included a table with the most common familial cancer syndromes with one or more benign or malignant tumors diagnosed in our case, namely, FAP, HNPCC, Cowden, Peutz-Jeghers, renal cancer, tuberous sclerosis, VHL, breast/other, breast/ovarian, Carney, Werner's, Bloom, Li-Fraumeni, xeroderma pigmentosum, ataxia-telangiectasia, osteochondromatosis, retinoblastoma, and MEN2A.
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PMID:Thyroid, Renal, and Breast Carcinomas, Chondrosarcoma, Colon Adenomas, and Ganglioneuroma: A New Cancer Syndrome, FAP, or Just Coincidence. 2708 12