Literature DB >> 14681681

Activating BRAF and N-Ras mutations in sporadic primary melanomas: an inverse association with allelic loss on chromosome 9.

Rajiv Kumar1, Sabrina Angelini, Kari Hemminki.   

Abstract

We searched and report mutations in the BRAF and N-ras genes in 22 out of 35 (63 percent) primary sporadic melanomas. In three melanomas, mutations were concomitantly present in both genes. In all, 10 out of 12 mutations in the BRAF gene involved the 'hot spot' codon 600 (In all communications on mutations in the BRAF gene, the nucleotide and codon numbers have been based on the NCBI gene bank nucleotide sequence NM_004333. However, according to NCBI gene bank sequence with accession number NT_007914, there is a discrepancy of one codon (three nucleotides) in exon 1 in the sequence with accession number NM_004333. The sequence analysis of exon 1 of the BRAF gene in our laboratory has shown that the sequence derived from NT_007914 is correct (Kumar et al., 2003). Due to the correctness of the latter, sequence numbering of codons and nucleotides after exon 1 are changed by +1 and +3, respectively.), one tandem CT1789-90TC base change represented a novel mutation and another mutation caused a G466R amino-acid change within the glycine-rich loop in the kinase domain. Mutations in the N-ras gene in 11 melanomas were at codon 61 whereas two melanomas carried mutations in codon 12 including a tandem mutation GG>AA. We observed an inverse association between BRAF/N-ras mutations and the frequency of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on chromosome 9 at 10 different loci. Melanomas with BRAF/N-ras mutations showed a statistically significant decreased frequency of LOH on chromosome 9 compared with cases without mutations (mean fractional allelic loss (FAL)=0.29+/-0.23 vs 0.72+/-0.33; t-test, P=0.0001). Difference in the FAL value between tumours with and without BRAF/N-ras mutations on 33 loci on five other chromosomes was not statistically significant (mean FAL 0.17+/-0.19 vs 0.25+/-0.22; t-test, P=0.24). Melanoma cases with BRAF/N-ras mutations were also associated with lower age at diagnosis than cases without mutations (mean age 80.38+/-7.24 vs 65.77+/-19.79 years; t-test, P=0.02). Our data suggest that the occurrence of BRAF/N-ras mutations compensate the requirement for the allelic loss at chromosome 9, which is one of the key events in melanoma.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14681681     DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1206909

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncogene        ISSN: 0950-9232            Impact factor:   9.867


  24 in total

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4.  Mutational status of naevus-associated melanomas.

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5.  BEAM: a randomized phase II study evaluating the activity of bevacizumab in combination with carboplatin plus paclitaxel in patients with previously untreated advanced melanoma.

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7.  Differential sensitivity of melanoma cell lines with BRAFV600E mutation to the specific Raf inhibitor PLX4032.

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Journal:  J Transl Med       Date:  2010-04-20       Impact factor: 5.531

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9.  Human cutaneous melanoma; a review of NRAS and BRAF mutation frequencies in relation to histogenetic subclass and body site.

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10.  BRAF screening as a low-cost effective strategy for simplifying HNPCC genetic testing.

Authors:  E Domingo; P Laiho; M Ollikainen; M Pinto; L Wang; A J French; J Westra; T Frebourg; E Espín; M Armengol; R Hamelin; H Yamamoto; R M W Hofstra; R Seruca; A Lindblom; P Peltomäki; S N Thibodeau; L A Aaltonen; S Schwartz
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 6.318

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