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)

In a patient with neurofibromatosis (von Recklinghausen disease; NF1), normal lymphocytes, five cutaneous neurofibromas, and tumour tissue from a recurrence of a malignant schwannoma were analysed for genetic alterations. Eleven DNA markers located on chromosome 17 and nine randomly chosen markers representing chromosomes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 11, were analysed. High resolution Giemsa banding of lymphocytes revealed no chromosomal rearrangement. The DNA from the neurofibromas were all found to have the same restricted fragment length polymorphism pattern as the constitutional DNA from the patient. In the malignant schwannoma a complete loss of one allele was found at polymorphic loci on chromosome arm 17p. One gene copy of the TP53 gene (17p13.1) and the NF1 gene (17q11.2) was lost, as was one copy of the PGA gene (11q13). No mutations were detected in the mutational hotspots of the TP53 gene. Partial losses were detected at three loci on chromosomes 1, 2 and 6, indicating a clonal variation within the tumour since histological evaluation disclosed no normal tissue in the analysed specimen. Our data indicate that the NF1 gene may function as a tumour suppressor gene, and that, either by effect of dose reduction or complete inactivation, both the NF1 gene and the TP53 gene may be critical for the progression of a neurofibroma to a malignant schwannoma. The observations made are consistent with the concept of stepwise multigenetic changes in tumour progression.
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PMID:Genetic alterations in a malignant schwannoma from a patient with neurofibromatosis (NF1). 835 Dec 50

Prospective cohort and case-control studies suggest an association between low folate intake and increased risk of colo-rectal adenoma and cancer. Some, but not all, animal studies indicate that folate supplementation protects against the development of colo-rectal neoplasms, although supraphysiological folate doses have been shown to enhance tumour growth. Folate is a methyl donor for nucleotide synthesis and biological methylation reactions, including DNA methylation. A low dietary folate intake may increase the risk of colo-rectal neoplasia by inducing genomic DNA hypomethylation, which can affect the expression of proto-oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes associated with the development of cancer. Common polymorphisms in genes involved in the methylation pathway, such as methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase and methionine synthase, have been shown to influence risk of colo-rectal neoplasia, with interactions dependent on folate status and/or alcohol intake, which is known to antagonise methyl group availability. There is some evidence to show that DNA from normal-appearing colo-rectal mucosa in individuals with colo-rectal cancer is hypomethylated. In a case-control study DNA methylation in normal-appearing colo-rectal mucosa has been shown to be lower in individuals with colo-rectal cancer (P = 0.08) and colo-rectal adenoma (P = 0.009) than in controls free of colo-rectal abnormalities. Human intervention trials to date suggest that supraphysiological doses of folate can reverse DNA hypomethylation in colo-rectal mucosa of individuals with colo-rectal neoplasia. In a double-blind randomised placebo-controlled study folate supplementation at physiological doses has been shown to increase DNA methylation in leucocytes (P = 0.05) and colonic mucosa (P = 0.09). Further studies are required to confirm these findings in larger populations and to define abnormal ranges of DNA methylation.
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PMID:Folate, DNA methylation and colo-rectal cancer. 1450 92

Diet is a major factor in the aetiology of colorectal cancer (CRC). Epidemiological evidence suggests that folate confers a modest protection against CRC risk. However, the relationship is complex, and evidence from human intervention trials and animal studies suggests that a high-dose of folic acid supplementation may enhance the risk of colorectal carcinogenesis in certain circumstances. The molecular mechanisms underlying the apparent dual modulatory effect of folate on colorectal carcinogenesis are not fully understood. Folate is central to C1 metabolism and is needed for both DNA synthesis and DNA methylation, providing plausible biological mechanisms through which folate could modulate cancer risk. Aberrant DNA methylation is an early event in colorectal carcinogenesis and is typically associated with the transcriptional silencing of tumour suppressor genes. Folate is required for the production of S-adenosyl methionine, which serves as a methyl donor for DNA methylation events; thereby folate availability is proposed to modulate DNA methylation status. The evidence for an effect of folate on DNA methylation in the human colon is limited, but a modulation of DNA methylation in response to folate has been demonstrated. More research is required to clarify the optimum intake of folate for CRC prevention and to elucidate the effect of folate availability on DNA methylation and the associated impact on CRC biology.
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PMID:Folate, colorectal cancer and the involvement of DNA methylation. 2286 81

Folate, one of the most studied dietary compounds, has recently become the main topic of debates on food fortification. Although low folate levels may be associated with increased risk of cancer development, simultaneously several reports indicate a detrimental effects mediated by high folate concentrations. Using the methylation sensitive restriction analysis (MSRA) and real-time RT-PCR we tested the effect of folic acid on DNA promoter methylation and expression of PTEN, APC and RARbeta2 tumour suppressor genes in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cell lines with different invasive capacity. The tested genes encode proteins involved in regulation of oncogenic intracellular signaling pathways. The results show that the increasing concentrations of folic acid lead to a dose-dependent down-regulation of tumour suppressor genes which may be linked to the increased DNA methylation detected within their promoter regions. The effects were more remarkable in non-invasive MCF-7 cells where we also observed 30% up-regulation of DNMT1 expression at the highest folate concentration used. Our findings show that caution need to be used when introducing folic acid supplementation since it may lead to cancer progression.
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PMID:Folic acid enforces DNA methylation-mediated transcriptional silencing of PTEN, APC and RARbeta2 tumour suppressor genes in breast cancer. 2321 37