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Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (
tumour suppressor
)
5,935
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at loci on chromosome 9p and/or 9q is the most frequent genetic alteration in transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder. However, localisation of the
tumour suppressor
locus or loci on 9q has been hampered by the relative infrequency of tumours with subchromosomal deletions. We have used 24 microsatellite markers to examine LOH in 70 new cases of TCC of the bladder and upper urinary tract. Forty tumours (57%) showed LOH at one or more loci on 9q and partial deletions were detected in five tumours (7%). Combined data from the five cases with partial deletions place one
tumour suppressor
locus at 9q34 between D9S61 and D9S66 (an estimated distance of 13-14 cM). This region is frequently deleted in other sporadic tumours and encompasses one of the loci for
tuberous sclerosis
(TSC1). One tumour contained a distinct deletion between D9S153 and D9S109 (9q13-q31), which encompasses the locus for the familial nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome (Gorlin syndrome). This may indicate the presence of another
tumour suppressor
locus on 9q for TCC. Our findings significantly reduce the regions of 9q within which suppressor genes for TCC may reside. The possible involvement of two deletion targets on 9q in addition to the locus at 9p21 implicated in TCC may explain why LOH at all loci on chromosome 9 is frequent in TCC.
...
PMID:Detailed deletion mapping of chromosome 9q in bladder cancer: evidence for two tumour suppressor loci. 747 93
We have previously demonstrated allele loss in hamartomas from patients with
tuberous sclerosis
for markers spanning the
tuberous sclerosis
gene on chromosome 16q13.3 (TSC2). Germline deletions in the TSC2 gene have been shown in 5% of patients with
tuberous sclerosis
(
TSC
). These data support our hypothesis that the TSC2 gene acts as a growth suppressor gene, analogous to the traditional
tumour suppressor
gene. We now report a
TSC
hamartoma showing allele loss for markers on chromosome 9q34 in the region of the TSC1 gene. We studied six hamartomas from four sporadic and two familial cases of
TSC
, none of which showed allele loss for markers on chromosome 16p13.3. The hamartomas were paraffin embedded sections of three renal angiomyolipomas, two giant cell astrocytomas, and a cardiac rhabdomyoma. Eight markers were analysed, comprising from centromeric to telomeric ASS-D9S64-D9S149-ABO-D9S150-DBH-D9S66-D9S67++ +. One angiomyolipoma showed allele loss for the markers ABO, DBH and D9S66, but not for D9S149 or D9S67. The patient was not informative for D9S150. The family structure did not permit the phase of the disease and marker alleles to be determined. These finding support the hypothesis that the TSC1 gene on 9q34, like the TSC2 gene, acts as a growth suppressor. The data would place the TSC1 gene between D9S149 and D9S67. Mapping of allele loss in hamartomas may help in the refinement of the location of the TSC1 locus.
...
PMID:The tuberous sclerosis gene on chromosome 9q34 acts as a growth suppressor. 784 9
Tuberous sclerosis
(
TSC
) is an autosomal dominant trait characterized by the widespread development of benign tumours classified as hamartoma, and is often associated with seizures and mental retardation. The patchy distribution and focal nature of the growths suggests that they might result from inactivation of a
tumour suppressor
gene by a two-hit process. Over the last 2 years, studies designed to investigate both germline and somatic
TSC
mutations have lent support to this hypothesis. Analysis of
TSC
-associated hamartomas has shown loss of heterozygosity for the regions of chromosomes 9 and 16 known to harbour
TSC
genes, consistent with the occurrence of somatic 'second-hit' mutations. Parallel investigations using pulse field gel electrophoresis have identified constitutional deletions representing 'first-hit' mutations at 16p13.3, leading to the rapid identification of one of the causative genes, TSC2. Intriguingly, the TSC2 product, tuberin, has an area of sequence homology with the GTPase activating protein rap1GAP, suggesting a possible mechanism for its role in regulating cellular growth.
...
PMID:The molecular genetics of tuberous sclerosis. 784 41
Tuberous sclerosis
(
TSC
) is an autosomal dominant condition with characteristic skin lesions, mental handicap, seizures and the development of hamartomas in the brain, heart, kidneys and other organs. Linkage studies have shown locus heterogeneity with a
TSC
gene mapped to chromosome 9q34 and a second, recently identified on 16p13.3. We have analysed DNA markers in eight hamartomas and one tumour from
TSC
patients and found allele loss on 16p13.3 in three angiomyolipomas, one cardiac rhabdomyoma, one cortical tuber and one giant cell astrocytoma. We suggest that the
TSC
gene on 16p13.3 functions like a
tumour suppressor
gene, in accordance with Knudsen's hypothesis.
...
PMID:Loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 16p13.3 in hamartomas from tuberous sclerosis patients. 816 74
Germ-line mutations of the TSC2
tumour suppressor
gene have been identified in humans with
tuberous sclerosis
and in the Eker rat. Tuberin, the human TSC2 gene product, has a small region of homology with rap1GAP and stimulates rap1 GTPase activity in vitro, suggesting that one of its cellular roles is to function as a GTPase activating protein (GAP). We have undertaken a comparative analysis of the TSC2 gene in human and the pufferfish, Fugu rubripes. In addition to the GAP domain, three other regions of the proteins are highly conserved (peptide sequence similarity > 80%). These regions are likely to represent further functional domains. To facilitate analysis of mutations within these domains we have determined the genomic structure of the human TSC2 gene. It comprises 41 exons, including exon 31 which was absent from the originally described spliceoform of the human TSC2 transcript and was identified following exon prediction from Fugu genomic sequence. These findings support the proposal of the Fugu genome as a tool for human gene analysis.
...
PMID:Comparative analysis and genomic structure of the tuberous sclerosis 2 (TSC2) gene in human and pufferfish. 884 53
Tuberous sclerosis
is an autosomal dominant trait in which the dysregulation of cellular proliferation and differentiation results in the development of hamartomatous growths in many organs. The TSC2 gene is one of two genes determining
tuberous sclerosis
. Inactivating germline mutations of TSC2 in patients with
tuberous sclerosis
and somatic loss of heterozygosity at the TSC2 locus in the associated hamartomas indicate that TSC2 functions as a
tumour suppressor
gene and that loss of function is critical to expression of the
tuberous sclerosis
phenotype. The TSC2 product, tuberin, has a region of homology with the GTPase activating protein rap1GAP and stimulates the GTPase activity of rap1a and rab5a in vitro. Here we show that the region of homology between tuberin and human rap1GAP and the murine GAP mSpa1 is more extensive than previously reported and spans approximately 160 amino acid residues encoded within exons 34-38 of the TSC2 gene. Single strand conformation polymorphism analysis of these exons in 173 unrelated patients with
tuberous sclerosis
and direct sequencing of variant conformers together with study of additional family members enabled characterisation of disease associated mutations in 14 cases. Missense mutations, which occurred in exons 36, 37 and 38 were identified in eight cases, four of whom shared the same recurrent change P1675L. Each of the five different missense mutations identified was shown to occur de novo in at least one sporadic case of
tuberous sclerosis
. The high proportion of missense mutations detected in the region of the TSC2 gene encoding the GAP-related domain supports its key role in the regulation of cellular growth.
...
PMID:The GAP-related domain of tuberin, the product of the TSC2 gene, is a target for missense mutations in tuberous sclerosis. 930 81
Tuberous sclerosis
(
TSC
) is an autosomal dominant disorder caused by a mutation in either the TSC1 or TSC2
tumour suppressor
gene. The disease is characterized by a broad phenotypic spectrum that can include seizures, mental retardation, renal dysfunction and dermatological abnormalities. TSC2 encodes tuberin, a putative GTPase activating protein for rap1 and rab5. The TSC1 gene was recently identified and codes for hamartin, a novel protein with no significant homology to tuberin or any other known vertebrate protein. Here, we show that hamartin and tuberin associate physically in vivo and that the interaction is mediated by predicted coiled-coil domains. Our data suggest that hamartin and tuberin function in the same complex rather than in separate pathways.
...
PMID:Interaction between hamartin and tuberin, the TSC1 and TSC2 gene products. 958 Jun 71
Tuberous sclerosis
is an autosomal dominant disorder. Besides the development of benign growths (hamartomas) in different tissues, one hallmark of this disease is the presence of highly epileptogenic dysplastic lesions in the cerebral cortex (tubers) composed of abnormal shaped neurones. Patients often show evidence of severe mental retardation. Linkage analysis revealed two disease-determining genes on chromosome 9 and chromosome 16. The TSC2 gene on chromosome 16 encodes a 1784-amino acid putative
tumour suppressor
protein, tuberin, that functions as a GTPase-activating protein. Here we show that tuberin expression is upregulated upon induction of neuronal differentiation in the neuroblastoma cell lines SK-N-SH and LAN-1. This upregulation occurs at post-transcriptional level and is independent of the proliferation status. TSC2 expression is unaffected during differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts into myotubes and of F9 embryonal carcinoma cells into cells resembling parietal endoderm. Antisense inhibition of tuberin expression in SK-N-SH or LAN-1 cells inhibits neuronal differentiation, but does not affect the differentiation of F9 cells. Ectopic overexpression of TSC2 not only reverts the antisense-associated phenotype but furthermore accelerates the neuronal differentiation process. Our data show for the first time that tuberin plays a critical role in neuronal differentiation. Such role is consistent with the phenotype of
tuberous sclerosis
patients, who inherit one defective TSC2 allele, and frequently lose the remaining normal allele in many of the tubers/hamartomas which develop in the central nervous system of these patients.
...
PMID:A role of the tuberous sclerosis gene-2 product during neuronal differentiation. 961 28
Tuberous sclerosis
complex is an inherited
tumour suppressor
syndrome, caused by a mutation in either the TSC1 or TSC2 gene. The disease is characterised by a broad phenotypic spectrum that can include seizures, mental retardation, renal dysfunction, and dermatological abnormalities. The TSC1 gene was recently identified and has 23 exons, spanning 45 kb of genomic DNA, and encoding an 8.6 kb mRNA. After screening all 21 coding exons in our collection of 225 unrelated patients, only 29 small mutations were detected, suggesting that TSC1 mutations are under-represented among
TSC
patients. Almost all TSC1 mutations were small changes leading to a truncated protein, except for a splice site mutation and two in frame deletions in exon 7 and exon 15. No clear difference was observed in the clinical phenotype of patients with an in frame deletion or a frameshift or nonsense mutation. We found the disease causing mutation in 13% of our unrelated set of
TSC
patients, with more than half of the mutations clustered in exons 15 and 17, and no obvious under-representation of mutations among sporadic cases. In conclusion, we find no support for a genotype-phenotype correlation for the group of TSC1 patients compared to the overall population of
TSC
patients.
...
PMID:Mutational spectrum of the TSC1 gene in a cohort of 225 tuberous sclerosis complex patients: no evidence for genotype-phenotype correlation. 1080 2
Deletions involving chromosome 9 occur in more than 50% of human bladder cancers of all grades and stages. Most involve loss of the whole chromosome or of an entire chromosome arm but some small deletions are found which can be used to define critical regions which may contain
tumour suppressor
genes. We have localized such a critical region of deletion at 9q34 between the markers D9S149 and D9S66, an interval which contains the
Tuberous Sclerosis
gene TSC1. Single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) and sequence analysis of TSC1 in bladder tumours and cell lines with 9q34 loss of heterozygosity (LOH) has identified five mutations in retained TSC1 alleles. Our results support the hypothesis that TSC1 can act as a bladder
tumour suppressor
gene.
...
PMID:Mutation of the 9q34 gene TSC1 in sporadic bladder cancer. 1035 10
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