Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (tumour suppressor)
5,935 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The MTS1/CDK4I gene encodes a 16 kDa cyclin kinase inhibitor and maps to chromosome 9p21. Previous studies have suggested the presence of a major tumour suppressor gene at this locus which may be inactivated in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). To determine the status of this gene in human primary and metastatic HNSCC, we examined the locus and its transcript for abnormalities by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Out of 14 cell lines studied, four had lost only exon 1, one had lost only exon 2, three had lost both exons 1 and 2, and none of the remaining six lines expressed a normal p16 mRNA. These latter six cell lines expressed p16 transcripts that had suffered deletions ranging in size from 2-16 base pairs. In each case, deletions led to a change of reading frame. Furthermore, in two cases abnormalities in the MTS1/CDK4I gene were identical in cells derived from metastatic tumours as compared to cells derived independently from the corresponding primary tumour. The identical nature of mutations observed in primary tumours and metastases derived from the same patient provides strong evidence that inactivation of p16 function was an in vivo event.
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PMID:MTS1/CDK4I is altered in cell lines derived from primary and metastatic oral squamous cell carcinoma. 800 Dec 21

To determine the incidence of homozygous deletions of the newly identified tumour suppressor gene, CDK4I, molecular genomic DNA analyses by PCR technique were performed on primary neoplastic cells from 22 childhood acute leukaemias obtained at presentation. The blast cells derived in all the analysed cases from bone marrow. We found that none of acute myeloblastic leukaemias (four cases) showed the CDK4I alteration, whereas 6/13 (46%) common acute lymphoblastic leukaemias (ALLs) displayed homozygous deletions. Moreover, and even more important, all the blasts purified from ALLs derived from early lymphoid precursors (three early-T ALLs and two pre-B ALLs) showed the absence of CDK4I gene. When the entire coding sequence of the CDK4I gene from samples without homozygous deletions was analysed by the single-strand conformational polymorphism method, no point mutations were identified. These results demonstrate that CDK4I gene deletions are very frequent and probably early events in childhood acute leukaemias of lymphoid origin and especially in early-T and pre-B ALLs. Moreover, the molecular mechanism of the loss of function of the gene is correlated, at least in childhood ALLs, almost exclusively to deletions and not to point mutations.
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PMID:High frequency of homozygous deletions of CDK4I gene in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 855 68