| Literature DB >> 11532193 |
G Calin1, G N Ranzani, D Amadori, V Herlea, I Matei, G Barbanti-Brodano, M Negrini.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Genomic instability has been reported at microsatellite tracts in few coding sequences. We have shown that the Bloom syndrome BLM gene may be a target of microsatelliteinstability (MSI) in a short poly-adenine repeat located in its coding region. To further characterize the involvement of BLM in tumorigenesis, we have investigated mutations in nine genes containing coding microsatellites in microsatellite mutator phenotype (MMP) positive and negative gastric carcinomas (GCs).Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11532193 PMCID: PMC48142 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2156-2-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
Status of the coding microsatellites within BLM, WRN, RECQL, CBL, hMSH6, hMSH3,IGFIIR,TGF-βRII and BAX genes in the series of gastric carcinomas with microsatellite mutator phenotype.
| Case | Histotypea | Stagingb | BLM | WRN | REQL | CBL | hMSH6 | hMSH3 | IGFIIR | TGF-βRII | BAX | |
| No. | MSIc | (A)9 | (A)8 | (A)9 | (ATG)6 | (C)8 | (A)8 | (G)8 | (A)10 | (G)8 | ||
| 31R | I | I(T2N0M0) | 2/5 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| 57R | I | IV(T3N1M1) | 5/5 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | + | - |
| 63R | I | I(T2N0M0) | 5/5 | - | - | - | - | + | - | - | + | + |
| 67R | I | I(T2N0M0) | 4/5 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | + | - |
| 69R | D | II(T3N0M0) | 4/5 | + | - | - | + | + | + | - | + | + |
| 79R | I | I(T2N0M0) | 5/5 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| 3P | I | II(T3N0M0) | 4/7 | + | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | + |
| 11P | I | III(T3N1M0) | 3/7 | + | - | - | - | - | + | + | + | - |
| 14P | M | II(T3N0M0) | 6/7 | + | - | - | + | + | - | - | + | + |
| 17P | I | II(T3N0M0) | 3/7 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| 19P | D | III(T3N1M0) | 3/7 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| 27P | I | IV(T4N0M0) | 2/5 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | + | - |
| 30P | I | I(T2N0M0) | 3/6 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| 37P | I | I(T2N0M0) | 3/7 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | + | - |
| 38P | I | III(T3N2M0) | 3/7 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | + | - |
| % | present study (number of cases) | 27% | 0% | 0% | 13% | 20% | 13% | 7% | 60% | 27% | ||
| mutations | (4/15) | (0/15) | (0/15) | (2/15) | (3/15) | (2/15) | (1/15) | (9/15) | (4/15) | |||
| reported in literature (in GCs)d | - | - | - | - | 22–52% | 19–64% | 19–24% | 42–83% | 15–64% | |||
a – I = intestinal type; D = diffuse type; M = mixed type b – according to the TNM classification (Sobin and Wittekind, 1997) c – number of unstable / total tested microsatellites d – data compiled from the references: [17,27,42,50,51,52]
Histotype and staging parameters associated with the MMP phenotype in our GCsa
| Variable | Number of patients | P valueb | ||
| Total (%) | MMP+ (%) | MMP-(%) | ||
| Histotype | ||||
| Intestinal | 32(68.0) | 12(37.5) | 20(62.5) | |
| Diffuse + Mixed | 15(32.0) | 3(20.0) | 12(80.0) | NSc |
| T (depth of wall infiltration) | ||||
| T1 + T2 | 12(25.5) | 6(50.0) | 6(50.0) | |
| T3 + T4 | 35(74.5) | 9(25.7) | 26(74.3) | NS |
| N (lymph node status) | ||||
| N0 | 18(38.3) | 11(78.5) | 7(21.5) | |
| N+ | 29(61.7) | 4(12.1) | 25(87.9) | |
| M (metastases) | ||||
| M0 | 40(85.1) | 14(35.0) | 26(65.0) | |
| M+ | 7(14.9) | 1(14.2) | 6(85.8) | NS |
| Staging | ||||
| I + II | 20(42.5) | 10(58.8) | 10(41.2) | |
| III + IV | 27(57.5) | 5(16.6) | 22(83.4) | |
| Totala | 47 | 15 | 32 | |
a – data were available for 47 out of 50 cases b – at Fisher exact test c – NS = not statistically significant
Figure 1Representative examples of mutations detected in microsatellites at gene coding regions. Case numbers are shown above each matching normal (N) and tumor (T) DNA pairs. Arrows indicate the abnormal bands. Note that we have not considered mutated samples where abnormal bands were very faint (like in the BLM and BAX genes of tumor sample 30P). Because of the tendency of Taq polymerase to add an extra nucleotide at the end of the synthesized DNA fragments, PCR products appear sometimes as double bands. With the exception of BAX frameshift in tumor 69R, no other mutation appears to be homozygous. However, by knowing the ratio of malignant cells in tumor sample, we have previously indicated that the BLM mutation in tumor 69R is also homozygous [24].