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Query: UNIPROT:P43146 (
tumour suppressor
)
5,935
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Germline mutations of the
tumour suppressor
gene
BRCA1
are involved in the predisposition and development of breast cancer and account for 20-45% of all hereditary cases. There is an increasing evidence that these tumours are characterised by a specific phenotype and pattern of gene expression. We have hypothesised that differences in chemosensitivity might parallel molecular heterogeneity of hereditary and sporadic breast tumours. To this end, we have investigated the chemosensitivity of the
BRCA1
-defective HCC1937 breast cancer cell line, and the
BRCA1
-competent MCF-7 (hormone-sensitive) and MDA-MB231 (hormone-insensitive) breast cancer cell lines using the MTT assay. The 50% inhibitory concentration (IC(50)) for the individual compounds were derived by interpolate plot analysis of the logarithmic scalar concentration curve after a 48 h exposure. HCC1937 cells were significantly (P<0.005) more sensitive to cisplatin (CDDP) (IC(50) : 30-40 microM) compared with MCF-7 (IC(50) : 60-70 microM) and MDA-MB231 (IC(50) : 90-100 microM) cells. On the other hand,
BRCA1
-defective breast cancer cells were significantly less sensitive to doxorubicin (Dox) (IC(50) : 45-50 microM) compared with MCF-7 (IC(50) : 1-5 microM) and MDA-MB231 (IC(50) : 5-10 microM) (P<0.02), as well as to paclitaxel (Tax) (IC(50) : >2 microM for HCC1937, 0.1-0.2 microM for MCF-7 and 0.01-0.02 microM for MDA-MB231) (P<0.001). Full-length
BRCA1
cDNA transfection of
BRCA1
-defective HCC1937 cells led to the reconstituted expression of BRCA1 protein in HCC1937/(WT)
BRCA1
-derived cell clone, but did not reduce tumour cell growth in soft agar.
BRCA1
reconstitution reverted the hypersensitivity to CDDP (P<0.02), and restored the sensitivity to Dox (P<0.05) and Tax (P<0.001), compared with parental HCC1937 cells. Taken together, our findings suggest a specific chemosensitivity profile of
BRCA1
-defective cells in vitro, which is dependent on BRCA1 protein expression, and suggest prospective preclinical and clinical investigation for the development of tailored therapeutical approaches in this setting.
...
PMID:BRCA1 expression modulates chemosensitivity of BRCA1-defective HCC1937 human breast cancer cells. 1269 98
Most
tumour suppressor
genes (TSGs) have been found through linkage studies in cancer predisposed families where the mutations have a high penetrance, for example, the breast cancer genes
BRCA1
and BRCA2. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) analyses of sporadic breast tumours indicate that there are many other putative TSGs yet to be identified. One such locus is proximal to
BRCA1
on human chromosome 17q21. In an attempt to isolate this putative TSG, we have assessed a portion of the orthologous region on mouse chromosome 11 for its tumorigenic potential using segmental haploidy in combination with a p53 mutation. Two populations of animals were studied, with the deleted region being either on the same (cis) or on the homologous chromosome (trans) to a targeted mutant p53 allele. The deficiency elevated the tumour susceptibility of p53 heterozygous mice and modified the tumour spectrum, but only when the deficiency was in trans with the p53 mutation. Even though the genotype of these mice is identical, allelic phasing affects both the tumour spectrum and progression.
...
PMID:Allelic phasing of a mouse chromosome 11 deficiency influences p53 tumorigenicity. 1276 99
Interest in
BRCA1
stems from its role as a
tumour suppressor
in breast and ovarian cancer. Intensive research in
BRCA1
has revealed little about its specific role in cancer; rather, this protein has been implicated in a multitude of important cellular processes. The diverse biochemical activities of
BRCA1
combine to protect the genome from damage. New data reveal that
BRCA1
transcriptionally regulates some DNA-repair genes, and, in addition, new roles for
BRCA1
have been identified in heterochromatin formation on the X chromosome, double-strand-break repair, and ubiquitination. These diverse activities of
BRCA1
may be linked in a single pathway, or
BRCA1
might function in multiple nuclear processes.
...
PMID:The multiple nuclear functions of BRCA1: transcription, ubiquitination and DNA repair. 1278 78
Many genetic and environmental factors contribute to development of cancer, but DNA methylation may provide a link between these influences. Genome stability and normal gene expression are largely maintained by a fixed and predetermined pattern of DNA methylation. In cancer, this idealistic scenario is disrupted by an interesting phenomenon: the hypermethylation of regulatory regions called CpG islands in some
tumour suppressor
genes--eg,
BRCA1
, hMLH1, p16INK4a, APC, VHL--which causes their inactivation. Development of new techniques that couple bisulphite modification with PCR has enabled these alterations to be studied in all types of biological fluids and archived tissues. Potentially, there are four types of translational studies that can be used to investigate the aberrant pattern of DNA methylation in cancer. First, CpG island hypermethylation can be used as a marker to identify cancer cells from biological samples, eg, serum and urine. This technique is highly sensitive and informative because profiles of tumour-suppressor-gene inactivation are specific to particular cancers. Second, single and combined genes that are inactivated by promoter hypermethylation, such as p16INK4a and DAPK, can be used as prognostic factors. Third, products of genes that are silenced by DNA methylation can be used as biomarkers of response to chemotherapy or hormone therapy--eg, the DNA repair O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase and the oestrogen receptor. Finally, dormant
tumour suppressor
genes can be reactivated by DNA demethylating drugs, with the aim of reversing the neoplastic phenotype. These are new avenues worth exploring in the fight against cancer.
...
PMID:Relevance of DNA methylation in the management of cancer. 1278 7
Germline mutations in the human checkpoint gene, hCHK2, were first identified in 1999 in cases of Li-Fraumeni syndrome. Recent studies have demonstrated that the hCHK2 1100delC mutation acts as a low-penetrance
tumour suppressor
gene in familial breast cancer not associated with mutations in
BRCA1
or BRCA2. The present article describes the published studies on hCHK2 1100delC and addresses some of the key questions raised.
...
PMID:Familial breast cancer and the hCHK2 1100delC mutation: assessing cancer risk. 1279 91
The molecular mechanisms underlying successful metastasis of primary colorectal tumour to the liver remain unknown. We have used suppression subtractive hybridisation (SSH) and reverse Northern dot blot analysis to profile the mRNA expression patterns of a primary colorectal cancer and its liver metastasis. After SSH and reverse Northern dot blot analysis, differential expression was confirmed in 17 clones from the forward, and 13 clones from the reverse subtracted cDNA library. Four clones showed no significant sequence identities with any known sequences in the GenBank data base and likely to represent novel genes whose up- or down-regulation is associated with colorectal liver metastasis. Interestingly, one of the 13 down-regulated clones displayed 99% sequence identity with the
BRCA1
tumour suppressor
gene. Since promoter methylation is a direct cause of transcription silencing of the
BRCA1
gene in approximately 10-20% of human breast cancer we further investigated its promoter methylation status in ten primary colorectal tumour samples, but revealed no evidence of promoter methylation.
...
PMID:Identification of differentially expressed genes associated with colorectal cancer liver metastasis. 1280 93
Germline mutations of the
BRCA1
gene predispose individuals mainly to the development of breast and/or ovarian cancer. However, the exact function of the gene is still unclear, although the encoded proteins are involved in various cellular processes, including transcriptional regulation and DNA repair pathways. Several
BRCA1
splice variants are found in different tissues, but in spite of intense investigations, their regulation and possible functions are poorly understood at the moment. This review summarises current knowledge on the roles of these splice variants and the mechanisms responsible for their formation. Because alternative splicing is now widely accepted as an important source of genetic diversity, elucidating the functions of the
BRCA1
splice variants would help in the understanding of the exact role(s) of this
tumour suppressor
. This should help to resolve the current paradox that, despite its seemingly vital cellular functions, mutations of this gene are associated with tissue specific tumour formation predominantly in the breast and the ovary.
...
PMID:Emerging roles of BRCA1 alternative splicing. 1289 Jul 39
BRCA1
is a putative
tumour suppressor
gene responsible for a hereditary ovarian cancer syndrome. To clarify the possible involvement of
BRCA1
in the development of sporadic ovarian neoplasms, this study analysed the immunohistochemical expression of BRCA1 protein in normal ovarian surface epithelium and 119 epithelial ovarian tumours (19 benign, 24 borderline, and 76 malignant tumours). Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of
BRCA1
was examined using three microsatellite markers to analyse the relationship between
BRCA1
expression and alterations of the
BRCA1
gene. Methylation of the
BRCA1
promoter was also analysed by methylation-specific PCR. In ovarian carcinomas showing heterogeneous expression of BRCA1 protein in the same tumour, LOH and methylation status were analysed using microdissection techniques. Finally, the relationship of
BRCA1
expression or its genetic alteration to clinicopathological parameters and patient survival was analysed. Ovarian surface epithelial cells expressed BRCA1 protein. Decreased expression of
BRCA1
was found in 16% of benign tumours, 38% of borderline tumours, and 72% of carcinomas. LOH of
BRCA1
was demonstrated in no benign tumours, 15% of borderline tumours, and 66% of carcinomas. Methylation of
BRCA1
was not detected in benign or borderline tumours, but was present in 31% of carcinomas. Reduced expression of
BRCA1
correlated with the presence of gene methylation. The frequency of
BRCA1
methylation and LOH was higher in serous carcinomas than in other types. In one of the three serous carcinomas that showed heterogeneous expression of
BRCA1
,
BRCA1
-positive borderline-like tumour cells were LOH-positive and methylation-negative, whereas adjacent
BRCA1
-negative carcinoma cells were LOH-positive and methylation-positive. The prognosis of carcinoma patients did not correlate with
BRCA1
expression or genetic status. These findings suggest that reduced expression of BRCA1 protein along with genetic and epigenetic changes of the
BRCA1
gene play an important role in the development of sporadic ovarian carcinomas, particularly those of serous histology.
...
PMID:Expression of BRCA1 protein in benign, borderline, and malignant epithelial ovarian neoplasms and its relationship to methylation and allelic loss of the BRCA1 gene. 1474 4
Cancer is a genetic disease. Breast cancer tumorigenesis can be described as a multi-step process in which each step is thought to correlate with one or more distinct mutations in major regulatory genes. The question addressed is how far a multi-step progression model for sporadic breast cancer would differ from that for hereditary breast cancer. Hereditary breast cancer is characterized by an inherited susceptibility to breast cancer on basis of an identified germline mutation in one allele of a high penetrance susceptibility gene (such as
BRCA1
, BRCA2, CHEK 2, TP53 or PTEN). Inactivation of the second allele of these
tumour suppressor
genes would be an early event in this oncogenic pathway (Knudson's "two-hit" model). Sporadic breast cancers result from a serial stepwise accumulation of acquired and uncorrected mutations in somatic genes, without any germline mutation playing a role. Mutational activation of oncogenes, often coupled with non-mutational inactivation of
tumour suppressor
genes, is probably an early event in sporadic tumours, followed by more, independent mutations in at least four or five other genes, the chronological order of which is likely less important. Oncogenes that have been reported to play an early role in sporadic breast cancer are MYC, CCND1 (Cyclin D1) and ERBB2 (HER2/neu). In sporadic breast cancer, mutational inactivation of
BRCA1
/2 is rare, as inactivation requires both gene copies to be mutated or totally deleted. However, non-mutational functional suppression could result from various mechanisms, such as hypermethylation of the
BRCA1
promoter or binding of BRCA2 by EMSY. In sporadic breast tumorigenesis, at least three different pathway-specific mechanisms of tumour progression are recognizable, with breast carcinogenesis being different in ductal versus lobular carcinoma, and in well differentiated versus poorly differentiated ductal cancers. Thus, different breast cancer pathways emerge early in the process of carcinogenesis, ultimately leading to clinically different tumour types. As mutations acquired early during tumorigenesis will be present in all later stages, large-scale gene expression profiling using DNA microarray analysis techniques can help to classify breast cancers into clinically relevant subtypes.
...
PMID:Oncogenic pathways in hereditary and sporadic breast cancer. 1943 86
The DNA damage checkpoint kinase, CHK2, promotes growth arrest or apoptosis through phosphorylating targets such as Cdc25A, Cdc25C,
BRCA1
, and p53. Both germline and somatic loss-of-function CHEK2 mutations occur in human tumours, the former linked to the Li-Fraumeni syndrome, and the latter found in diverse types of sporadic malignancies. Here we examined the status of CHK2 by genetic and immunohistochemical analyses in 53 breast carcinomas previously characterized for TP53 status. We identified two CHEK2 mutants, 470T>C (Ile157Thr), and a novel mutation, 1368insA leading to a premature stop codon in exon 13. The truncated protein encoded by CHEK2 carrying the 1368insA was stable yet mislocalized to the cytoplasm in tumour sections and when ectopically expressed in cultured cells. Unexpectedly, we found CHEK2 to be subject to extensive alternative splicing, with some 90 splice variants detected in our tumour series. While all cancers expressed normal-length CHEK2 mRNA together with the spliced transcripts, we demonstrate and/or predict some of these splice variants to lack CHK2 function and/or localize aberrantly. We conclude that cytoplasmic sequestration may represent a novel mechanism to disable CHK2, and propose to further explore the significance of the complex splicing patterns of this
tumour suppressor
gene in oncogenesis.
...
PMID:Alternative splicing and mutation status of CHEK2 in stage III breast cancer. 1536 33
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