| Literature DB >> 10417756 |
K Wright1, P Wilson, S Morland, I Campbell, M Walsh, T Hurst, B Ward, M Cummings, G Chenevix-Trench.
Abstract
The molecular mechanisms involved in the generation of epithelial ovarian cancers are poorly understood, but evidence suggests that the different histological subtypes may arise from independent tumorigenic events. beta-Catenin is emerging as an important oncogene in the transformation of a number of epithelial cancers, and mutations have been reported in a small study of endometrioid ovarian adenocarcinomas. Mutations in the NH(2)-regulatory domain of beta-catenin stabilise the cytoplasmic levels of this protein, which promotes up-regulation of the beta-catenin-T-cell factor-lymphoid enhancer factor transcriptional complex. We report here beta-catenin (CTNNB1) exon 3 mutation analysis in 149 epithelial ovarian carcinomas. This revealed 10/63 (16%) endometrioid ovarian tumours with activating mutations of the beta-catenin gene. All mutations were missense changes within the GSK3beta consensus site, affecting serine residues at codons 33 and 37 and glycine at codon 34. Immuno-histochemical analysis identified cytoplasmic stabilisation and nuclear translocation in those endometrioid tumours with mutations. This phenotypic change was also identified in 3 other endometrioid tumours that did not have somatic mutations within exon 3 of CTNNB1. Stabilisation of the free, monomeric pool of beta-catenin and the probable resulting constitutive activation of its Tcf-associated transcriptional complex appears to be a specific oncogenic event in endometrioid ovarian adenocarcinoma. Copyright 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10417756 DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1097-0215(19990827)82:5<625::aid-ijc1>3.0.co;2-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396