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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (
colon cancer
)
28,837
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Heritable and genetic factors pertinent to
colon cancer
can be divided into three categories: inherited syndromes, genetic epidemiology, and molecular genetics. Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) and Gardner syndrome (GS) are rare dominantly inherited syndromes characterized by hundreds to thousands of colonic adenomatous polyps.
Colon cancer
occurs at a young age in both diseases unless the colon is removed. Peutz-Jeghers syndrome and familial juvenile polyposis are inherited hamartomatous polyposis conditions with a less dramatic, but definite, increased risk for
colon cancer
. These four polyposis syndromes together account for less than 1% of cases of colon malignancy. Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer is a dominantly inherited form of
colon cancer
characterized by an early age of onset and a predilection for proximal colonic tumours. Multiple primary malignancies are frequently observed and one or several adenomatous polyps are often present in affected individuals; 4-6% of
colon cancer
cases occur in relationship to this syndrome. Genetic epidemiological studies have consistently shown that first-degree relatives of persons with
colon cancer
have a twofold to threefold increased risk of having colon malignancy. More recent studies have found a similar risk among relatives of those with adenomatous polyps. Studies of
colon cancer
and adenomatous polyps in pedigrees have further demonstrated that this familial clustering probably occurs on the basis of partially penetrant inherited susceptibilities. These inherited susceptibilities probably interact with environmental factors to give rise to polyp growth and finally
colon cancer
. Molecular studies have begun to elucidate the genetic mechanisms of
colon cancer
at the DNA level. The germinal mutation of FAP and GS has been localized to the long arm of chromosome 5. Tissue samples from "random" adenomatous polyps and colon cancers have shown frequent and specific acquired DNA sequence deletions on chromosomes 5, 17, and 18. Mutations and over-expression of the ras oncogene likewise have been observed in such tissues. The chromosome 5 defect in polyp and cancer tissues is probably at the same locus as the germinal mutation of FAP. There is evidence that this locus normally regulates expression of the c-myc oncogene, which in turn probably has a regulatory function in DNA replication. The chromosome 17 deletion is a mutation of the gene for the transformation-associated protein,
p53
. Appropriate screening starting at a relatively young age is necessary to prevent cancer in the inherited syndromes. Screening is also indicated in close relatives of those with nonsyndromic or common
colon cancer
in view of the moderately increased risk for
colon cancer
in this group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Risk and surveillance of individuals with heritable factors for colorectal cancer. WHO Collaborating Centre for the Prevention of Colorectal Cancer. 228 1
Adenomatous polyposis, mainly of the colon, (APC) is a rare dominantly inherited susceptibility to
colon cancer
in which individuals develop hundreds of polyps mainly in their large bowel. The APC gene has been localised to chromosome 5q21 by following up a case report of an individual with an interstitial deletion on chromosome 5q who had multiple developmental abnormalities together with adenomatous polyposis. A DNA marker (D5S71) was found to be closely linked to APC in family studies and localised to 5q21 by in situ annealing. Material from further patients with deletions in this region of chromosome 5 has been used, by a combination of somatic cell hybrid and long-range DNA analysis, to identify new DNA markers close to the APC gene. These and other markers now provide the basis for genetic counselling of nearly all families with APC. These studies are being extended, together with other approaches for analysing DNA clones around the APC gene, in the search for the gene itself. Allele loss in tumour as compared to normal tissue from sporadic cases of colorectal carcinomas has clearly implicated the APC gene in at least 25 to 40% of all cases of colorectal carcinomas. Similar studies by Vogelstein and others as well as ourselves have further implicated recessive changes on chromosomes 17 and 18 in the development of colorectal carcinomas. Following the demonstration by Vogelstein of the role of
p53
mutations in connection with the chromosome 17 changes, we have now shown, using monoclonal antibodies to the mutant p53 products and by other approaches, that changes in the
p53
gene may occur in up to 50% or more of colorectal carcinomas. Frequent mutations of the K-ras dominant oncogene, as well as changes in the expression of human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-A, B, C determinants, are further genetic changes that appear commonly to be involved in the progression of colorectal carcinomas. The latter have important implications for T cell immune response to tumours and its manipulation for treatment and even prevention of colorectal cancer. We may soon be approaching a situation when it will become possible to identify all the genetic steps and their sequence during tumour progression, as well as their functional significance largely through the induction of inappropriate growth and the suppression of differentiation.
...
PMID:Genetic analysis of colorectal cancer. 256 87
Six
colon cancer
cell lines, 13 colon tumors and ten normal colon tissues were analyzed for RNA expression using probes for c-myc, c-k-ras, c-myb, and c-fos and for the
p53
, TGF-alpha, and EGF receptor genes. No aberrant transcripts were detected. Levels of expression in tumors ranged from two-fold below that of normal tissue when the v-fos probe was used to 10 fold above the normal level when the c-myc probe was used. Enhanced c-myc expression was also observed in the cell lines. Southern and DNA dot blot analyses revealed c-myc amplification in three of the six cell lines.
...
PMID:Oncogene expression in adenocarcinomas of the colon and in colon tumor-derived cell lines. 328 75
Skin fibroblasts (SFs) from patients with adenomatosis of the colon and rectum (ACR) were shown, in general, to express elevated amounts of the
p53 antigen
as determined by immunoprecipitation with the monoclonal antibody PAb421. Infection with simian virus 40 (SV40) induced expression of the
p53 antigen
in SFs from normal individuals and further amplified its expression in ACR cells. The half-lives of the
p53 antigen
in mock-infected ACR cells and in SV40-transformed normal or ACR cells were about 2 and 15 hours, respectively. No immediate differences were detected in the coding segment of the human
p53
gene between normal and ACR cells by either Southern or Northern blot analysis. These results suggest that over-expression of the
p53 antigen
is due, in part, to the increased stability of the
p53 antigen
in ACR cells. Over-expression represents an early event that is possibly associated with initiation and promotion of inherited
colon cancer
.
...
PMID:Elevated levels of p53 antigen in cultured skin fibroblasts from patients with hereditary adenocarcinoma of the colon and rectum and its relevance to oncogenic mechanisms. 346 15
To investigate the biological function of
p53
in colon carcinoma cells, a wild-type
p53
expression plasmid under the control of the human cytomegalovirus promoter was stably transfected into the human colon adenocarcinoma cell line WiDr, which carries a mutation of the
p53
gene at codon 273. Exogenous wild-type
p53
transcripts were detected at various expression levels in 8 of 117 G418-resistant clones. The growth rates of the wild-type p53+ clones in culture did not change significantly. The efficiency of colony formation in soft agar, however, was completely suppressed in two wild-type p53+ clones. This is the first to demonstrate the feasibility of stable transfection of the wild-type
p53
gene under the control of non-inducible promoter in human
colon cancer
cells. The major alteration found was that wild-type p53+ cells which were incubated with anti-Fas IgM showed marked cytolysis with preferential over-expression of wild-type
p53
accompanied by overexpression of a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, WAF1, whereas the endogenous mutant p53 retained its expression level. The findings suggest that a Fas-initiated pathway is incidentally linked to a
p53
-dependent apoptotic pathway through the reconstituted wild-type
p53
gene in WiDr cells. This model should help elucidating the additional role of the
p53 tumor suppressor
gene and the mechanism of apoptosis in colon carcinoma cells.
...
PMID:Induction of Fas-mediated apoptosis in p53-transfected human colon carcinoma cells. 747 11
A more accurate method of detecting nodal disease in squamous cell carcinoma of the tongue is needed so that treatment of the neck with its associated morbidity can safely be reserved for patients who actually have metastatic disease. Tumor angiogenesis and the expression of the
p53 antigen
--which have each been shown to be predictive of metastasis in breast and
colon cancer
, respectively--are examined for their ability to predict neck metastasis in tongue cancer. Fifty-seven patients with T1 and T2 squamous cell carcinoma of the oral tongue, whose neck disease was examined by dissection or by 2-year follow-up, were studied. Twenty-eight patients (49%) were node positive and 29 patients (51%) were node negative. The primary tumors were immunohistochemically stained for the
p53 antigen
and for factor VIII, which allowed the blood vessels within the tumor to be quantitated. The mean vessel counts per x200 high-power field were 59.8 and 61.5 for node-positive and node-negative patients, respectively (p = 0.8). Node-positive patients showed overexpression of
p53
43% of the time, vs. 61% for node-negative patients (p = 0.17). Multivariate analysis confirmed that no difference in tumor angiogenesis or the expression of the
p53 antigen
was found between tumors that had metastasized and those that had not. Therefore neither tumor angiogenesis nor the
p53
tumor marker is clinically useful in determining lymph node metastasis in these patients.
...
PMID:Tumor angiogenesis, the p53 antigen, and cervical metastasis in squamous carcinoma of the tongue. 752 5
The wild-type
p53
gene suppresses cell proliferation and induces apoptosis when it is transfected into human
colon cancer
cell lines. Therefore, mutation of the
p53
gene, which correlates closely with
p53 protein
overexpression, would be predicted to activate cell proliferation and limit apoptosis. We tested this hypothesis by correlating
p53 protein
expression with cell proliferation and apoptosis in 70 neoplasms (29 adenomas and 41 carcinomas) using
p53
and Ki-67 immunohistochemical staining and DNA nick end labelling. The
p53
immunoreactivity was independent of the Ki-67 positivity. The apoptotic incidence was less frequent (P < 0.005) in tumours with diffuse
p53 protein
overexpression than in those with the sporadic overexpression, defined as
p53
staining of isolated or scattered expression. In addition, apoptotic incidence only correlated directly (P < 0.05) with Ki-67 positivity in tumours with sporadic
p53
-protein expression. These results indicate that
p53 protein
that is expressed sporadically in colorectal neoplasms is probably wild-type protein and induces apoptosis in response to active cell proliferation. In contrast, diffusely overexpressed
p53 protein
in colorectal neoplasms is probably mutant and correlates with a reduction in apoptotic cell death independently of cell proliferation.
...
PMID:Correlation of p53 protein expression with apoptotic incidence in colorectal neoplasia. 755 42
The K-ras and
p53
genes are two of the most frequently mutated genes found in the human colonic tumors. Since azoxymethane (AOM) induced rat colonic neoplasms are similar to human colonic tumors in their histological features and proliferation characteristics, the rat has been used as an experimental model to study the pathogenesis of
colon cancer
in humans. Although the presence of K-ras point mutations has been reported in AOM induced rat colonic tumors, there are no reports describing the frequency for mutation of the
p53
gene in these tumors. In this study, colon adenocarcinomas induced in rats by AOM were examined for the presence of point mutations in exons 5-8 of the
p53
gene, using a combination of single strand conformation (SSCP) analysis, immunohistochemistry and direct DNA sequencing. SSCP analysis showed no differences in banding patterns between the normal mucosa and any of the 20 adenocarcinomas analyzed. Nuclear
p53
immunoreactivity was absent in all tumors examined. Since
p53
point mutations predominate in malignant colonic tumors, five adenocarcinomas with the greatest local invasiveness were analyzed by direct DNA sequencing of exons 5-8 of the
p53
gene. Direct DNA sequencing did not reveal mutations in any of the adenocarcinomas analyzed, within the coding region of
p53
gene that were sequenced. The results from the present study indicate that point mutations in the
p53
gene, at least in the coding region (exons 5-8) are not involved in the development of
colon cancer
induced by AOM in the rat.
...
PMID:Absence of p53 gene mutations in rat colon carcinomas induced by azoxymethane. 755 9
For several human tumour types, allelic loss data suggest that one or more tumour suppressor genes reside telomeric to the
p53
gene at chromosome 17p13.1. In the present study we have used a new strategy, involving molecular analysis of a DNA site hypermethylated in tumour DNA, to identify a candidate gene in this region (17p13.3). Our approach has led to identification of HIC-1 (hypermethylated in cancer), a new zinc-finger transcription factor gene which is ubiquitously expressed in normal tissues, but underexpressed in different tumour cells where it is hypermethylated. Multiple characteristics of this gene, including the presence of a
p53
binding site in the 5' flanking region, activation of the gene by expression of a wild-type
p53
gene and suppression of G418 selectability of cultured brain, breast and
colon cancer
cells following insertion of the gene, make HIC-1 gene a strong candidate for a tumour suppressor gene in region 17p13.3.
...
PMID:p53 activates expression of HIC-1, a new candidate tumour suppressor gene on 17p13.3. 758 25
Abnormality of
p53
, a tumor suppressor gene, is considered to be a potential cause of malignancy. We found that ellipticine and 9-hydroxyellipticine (9HE), antitumor alkaloids, caused selective inhibition of
p53 protein
phosphorylation in Lewis lung carcinoma and SW480 (human
colon cancer
cell line) in a concentration-dependent manner from 0.1 to 100 microM. 9HE suppressed cdk2 kinase activity concentration-dependently from 1 to 100 microM. By contrast, the inhibition of
p53 protein
phosphorylation by elliptinium and elliprabin (N2 substituted derivatives of 9HE) was very weak. A good correlation was observed between
p53
phosphorylation inhibition and cytotoxic activity of these agents in terms of concentration-response relationships, suggesting that inhibition of
p53 protein
phosphorylation via kinase inhibition may be involved in the anticancer mechanism of these agents. In addition, this study demonstrated that brief exposure to 9HE caused apoptosis of cancer cells. It is suggested that accumulation of dephosphorylated mutant p53 may induce apoptosis.
...
PMID:Inhibition of p53 protein phosphorylation by 9-hydroxyellipticine: a possible anticancer mechanism. 759 58
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