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)

Human tumorigenesis is associated with the accumulation of mutations both in oncogenes and in tumour suppressor genes. But in no common adult cancer have the mutations that are critical in the early stages of the tumorigenic process been defined. We have attempted to determine if mutations of the APC gene play such a role in human colorectal tumours, which evolve from small benign tumours (adenomas) to larger malignant tumours (carcinomas) over the course of several decades. Here we report that sequence analysis of 41 colorectal tumours revealed that the majority of colorectal carcinomas (60%) and adenomas (63%) contained a mutated APC gene. Furthermore, the APC gene met two criteria of importance for tumour initiation. First, mutations of this gene were found in the earliest tumours that could be analysed, including adenomas as small as 0.5 cm in diameter. Second, the frequency of such mutations remained constant as tumours progressed from benign to malignant stages. These data provide strong evidence that mutations of the APC gene play a major role in the early development of colorectal neoplasms.
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PMID:APC mutations occur early during colorectal tumorigenesis. 152 64

Development of colon carcinomas can be associated with allelic deletions on several chromosomes, including 5q and 18q. The APC gene on 5q and the DCC gene on 18q have been identified as potential tumour suppressor genes, whose suppression contributes to colon carcinogenesis. To investigate the role of genes in these deleted regions, we have now introduced a single normal human chromosome into a human colon carcinoma cell line, COKFu, through microcell hybridization. Several clones of hybrid cells containing normal chromosome 5, and others containing normal chromosome 18, were obtained. The morphology of the hybrid cells was markedly altered: the hybrids with chromosome 5 exhibited a closely packed polygonal morphology, and the hybrid cells with chromosome 18 were flattened. The cloning efficiency of the hybrid cells in soft agar was reduced from 0.46 to 0% of that of the parental carcinoma cells, and the tumorigenicity of these hybrid cells in athymic nude mice was completely suppressed. The growth properties of the hybrid cells with chromosome 11 were not substantially changed. These results strongly suggest that the genes on normal chromosome 5 and 18 function as tumour suppressors in colon carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Suppression of tumorigenicity in human colon carcinoma cells by introduction of normal chromosome 5 or 18. 167 Sep 65

The loss of epithelial differentiation in carcinomas, which is accompanied by higher mobility and invasiveness of the tumour cells, is often a consequence of reduced intercellular adhesion. The primary cause of the "scattering" of cells in invasive carcinomas appears to be a disturbance of the integrity of intercellular junctions, often involving the cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin. Permanent and transient molecular mechanisms can lead to the impairment of junction integrity of epithelial cells and thus to the progression of carcinomas towards a more invasive state. These include downregulation of E-cadherin expression and interaction between the adherens junction protein beta-catenin and the tumour suppressor gene product APC.
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PMID:Adherens junction proteins in tumour progression. 755 58

Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is one of several tumours associated with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), an inherited tumour syndrome which appears to result from germ-line mutation of the APC tumour suppressor gene. Here we investigate the possibility that somatic mutation of APC might play a role in sporadic PTC. 16 cases of PTC together with matched normal tissue were examined by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis, concentrating on the mutation cluster region (MCR) of the APC gene (codons 1286-1513). No evidence of mutation was observed in any sample. We conclude that APC mutation, at least in the MCR, is not a significant causal mechanism in sporadic PTC.
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PMID:Evidence against involvement of APC mutation in papillary thyroid carcinoma. 794 97

Our study was undertaken to determine the prognostic significance of several common genetic alterations observed in colorectal carcinomas. We have previously analysed loss of heterozygosity of the MCC, APC, p53 and DCC tumour suppressor gene loci as well as p53 gene mutations and protein over-expression in a series of 100 Dukes' stage B and C colorectal tumours obtained at surgery. To extend our observations of alterations that may occur in these tumours, mutations to the c-Ki-ras oncogene and APC tumour suppressor gene were detected by PCR single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis. Short-term follow-up revealed no significant association between overall patient survival and any single, or combination of, genetic alteration(s). Surprisingly, patients whose tumours showed evidence of p53 protein over-expression/accumulation by immunocytochemistry (ICC) had a significantly better prognosis (p = 0.039) than those whose tumours had no p53 ICC reactivity.
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PMID:The common molecular genetic alterations in Dukes' B and C colorectal carcinomas are not short-term prognostic indicators of survival. 798 12

Frequent loss of heterozygosity in ovarian carcinoma (OC) has been reported on several different chromosomes. We have studied 27 OCs and corresponding normal tissue for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) using 10 markers detecting polymorphisms on chromosome 5 (two on 5p and eight on 5q). Three tumours showed extra copies, rather than loss, of one homologue. Twelve of 24 remaining tumours showed LOH on 5q (50%), and 8 of 21 on 5p (38%). Of the 12 showing LOH on 5q, 7 showed reduction to homozygosity at all informative markers over the chromosome. The remaining 5 showed LOH over all of 5q. These data are consistent with the localisation of a tumour suppressor gene on 5q involved in OC. A good candidate is the APC gene, which is mutated in a number of adenocarcinoma derived from several tissues and is located at 5q21-22. The APC gene was studied in 40 ovarian tumours, including all the OCs showing LOH, by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP). Analysis of all the exons containing published mutations (approximately 4.7 kb of the cDNA) did not reveal any band shifts that could be attributed to mutations. However, a new polymorphism was detected, as well as 7 known polymorphisms. Together, these data indicate that (1) LOH is common on chromosome 5 in OC, (2) APC is not mutated in OC, and (3) another gene (or genes) on chromosome 5q is responsible for the LOH seen.
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PMID:Loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 5 in sporadic ovarian carcinoma is a late event and is not associated with mutations in APC at 5q21-22. 801 64

We used Southern blot analysis and polymerase chain reaction-based techniques to examine deletions of tumour suppressor gene loci in 91 primary colorectal tumours. The tumour suppressor genes studied were MCC and APC on chromosome 5q, p53 on chromosome 17p, DCC on chromosome 18q, and the putative suppressor gene nm23-H1 on chromosome 17q. The most frequent allelic loss observed was in chromosome 17p with 76% (68/89) of informative tumours showing loss of heterozygosity at this locus, followed by 34% (19/55) for DCC, 31% (12/39) for MCC, 17% (9/53) for APC and 16% (3/19) for nm23. No significant differences in the frequency of these suppressor gene allelic losses were observed between Dukes B and C stage adenocarcinomas.
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PMID:Loss of heterozygosity of tumour suppressor gene loci in human colorectal carcinoma. 808 Jun 84

The detection in tumors of genomic regions with a high frequency of loss of heterozygosity has led to the localization and subsequent cloning of a number of tumour suppressor genes. To identify such regions involved in the development of squamous carcinoma of the head and neck we have analyzed 28 paired normal and tumor DNA samples. Using the polymerase chain reaction to amplify 50 simple sequence repeats or microsatellite markers we have studied all 22 q limbs and 17 of the p limbs in 21 patients. In informative cases we observed a high incidence of loss of heterozygosity at five specific chromosomal regions: 3p (44%); 5q (43%); 9q (35%); 11q (45%); and 17p (31%). In addition, further analysis of tumors showing loss of heterozygosity at 5q suggests that a gene at or near the APC locus is involved in squamous carcinoma of the head and neck.
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PMID:An allelotype of squamous carcinoma of the head and neck using microsatellite markers. 813 68

Thirty-four primary, untreated sporadic breast cancers were examined for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at tumour suppressor loci involved in colorectal cancer: APC/MCC at 5q21 and DCC at 18q21. LOH was identified in 28% informative patients at 5q21 and 31% at 18q21. LOH at 5q21 and 18q21 was compared with allele loss at 17p13 and concurrent LOH at two or more of the loci was noted in 24% of tumours. Expression of a 12 kb DCC mRNA was demonstrated in 14/34 (42%) of the cancers and in all five tumours with LOH at the DCC locus there was an additional 11 kb DCC mRNA. Abnormalities of three loci involved in colorectal cancer (5q21, 17p13 and 18q21) therefore also occur in sporadic breast cancer. The accumulation of such genetic abnormalities may confer a growth advantage important in the development of breast cancer.
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PMID:Allele loss from 5q21 (APC/MCC) and 18q21 (DCC) and DCC mRNA expression in breast cancer. 831 22

Abnormalities affecting tumour suppressor genes on chromosome 5q21 are increasingly recognised as important in the pathogenesis of a variety of human cancers, particularly of the gastrointestinal tract. We have examined a series of gastric and pancreatic cancers from European patients for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of markers within and around the APC and MCC genes on chromosome 5q21 using restriction fragment length polymorphism and polymerase chain reaction techniques. We find that LOH of the APC and MCC genes is particularly frequent in gastric cancers of diffuse type, but very infrequent in pancreatic cancers. We have also used single-strand conformational polymorphism to screen for abnormalities of the sequence of the APC and MCC genes in a panel of pancreatic cancer cell lines. Our results suggest that there are distinct differences in the molecular pathogenesis of gastric and pancreatic cancer and that abnormalities of APC and MCC may be involved particularly in the diffuse type of gastric cancer.
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PMID:Abnormalities affecting the APC and MCC tumour suppressor gene loci on chromosome 5q occur frequently in gastric cancer but not in pancreatic cancer. 840 87


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