| Literature DB >> 11960377 |
Nasrin Sarafan-Vasseur1, Aude Lamy, Jeannette Bourguignon, Florence Le Pessot, Philip Hieter, Richard Sesboüé, Christian Bastard, Thierry Frébourg, Jean-Michel Flaman.
Abstract
To identify genes which overexpression results into chromosomal instability (CIN), we developed a biological approach based on a yeast indicator strain in which CIN can be detected by a sectoring phenotype. Screening in this strain of a yeast genomic library cloned into a high copy vector led us to identify, among the clones generating 100% of sectoring colonies, Clb5, one of the six B-type cyclins present in yeast. Overexpression of cyclin B2 and cyclin B1, the two human homologs of Clb5, in the CIN indicator strain resulted also into a sectoring phenotype and induced, like overexpression of Clb5, an abnormal sensitivity to benomyl, indicating that overexpression of B-type cyclins alters the spindle checkpoint. In a series of 38 primary colorectal cancers, we detected in five tumors (13%) an accumulation of cyclin B1, which was neither related to mRNA overexpression nor to mutation within the coding region, and in five other tumors (13%) a 2-10-fold increase of cyclin B2 mRNA which was not related to gene amplification. These results suggest that overexpression of cyclins B, resulting from different mechanisms, could contribute, through an alteration of the spindle checkpoint, to the chromosomal instability observed in cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 11960377 DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1205257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 9.867