| Literature DB >> 26448938 |
Ning Yi Yap1, Retnagowri Rajandram2, Keng Lim Ng3, Jayalakshmi Pailoor4, Ahmad Fadzli1, Glenda Carolyn Gobe5.
Abstract
The most common form of malignant renal neoplasms is renal cell carcinoma (RCC), which is classified into several different subtypes based on the histomorphological features. However, overlaps in these characteristics may present difficulties in the accurate diagnosis of these subtypes, which have different clinical outcomes. Genomic and molecular studies have revealed unique genetic aberrations in each subtype. Knowledge of these genetic changes in hereditary and sporadic renal neoplasms has given an insight into the various proteins and signalling pathways involved in tumour formation and progression. In this review, the genetic aberrations characteristic to each renal neoplasm subtype are evaluated along with the associated protein products and affected pathways. The potential applications of these genetic aberrations and proteins as diagnostic tools, prognostic markers, or therapeutic targets are also assessed.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26448938 PMCID: PMC4584050 DOI: 10.1155/2015/476508
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Hereditary RCCs and their related genetic aberrations.
| Tumour type | Syndrome | Clinical manifestation | Chromosome | Candidate gene |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ccRCC | Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) | Retinal, cerebellar and spinal hemangioblastoma; pheochromocytoma; pancreatic, epididymal and renal cysts; hemangiomas of the adrenals, liver, and lungs; endolymphatic sac tumours; cystadenoma of the epididymis or broad ligament and ccRCC (40–75%) [ | 3p25 |
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| Constitutional chromosome 3 translocation | ccRCC | Various breakpoints in chromosome 3 | Possible breakpoint associated genes: | |
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| pRCC | Hereditary papillary RCC (HPRC) | pRCC | 7q31 |
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| Hereditary leiomyomatosis and RCC (HLRCC) | Cutaneous leiomyomas, uterine fibroids, type II | 1q42-43 |
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| chRCC or RO | Birt-Hogg-Dubé (BHD) | Skin fibrofolliculomas, pulmonary cysts, spontaneous pneumothorax, and renal cancer (20–29%) (chRCC, RO, ccRCC and pRCC) [ | 17p11.2 |
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| Chromosome | Type of genetic alteration | Candidate gene | Incidence | Function of protein | Prognosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3p25-26 | LOH, hypermethylation, mutations |
| Found in 57–91% of tumours [ | pVHL targets HIFa degradation; | No clear association between |
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| 3p14.2 | LOH, translocation, hypermethylation |
| Aberrations in 69–90% of ccRCC [ | FHIT protein is involved in apoptosis and proliferation [ |
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| 3p21.3 | Hypermethylation |
| Methylation in 23–91% ccRCC tumours [ | RASSF1A promotes cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and microtubule stability [ | Hypermethylation of the |
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| 3p21 | Truncating and missense mutations |
| Mutations in 29–41% of ccRCC tumours [ | BAF180 subunit of the SWI/SNF (switch and sucrose nonfermentable) chromatin remodeling complex; | Due to contradictory findings, relationship of |
| 1p36.11 | Copy number loss |
| Copy number loss in 16% of patients with ccRCC [ | BAF250a subunit of SWI/SNF complex | Low ARID1A mRNA and BAF250a immunostaining associated with higher stage, grade, and worse disease-free and disease specific survival [ |
| 3p21.3 | Truncating and missense mutations |
| Inactivated in 6–15% of ccRCC [ | BAP1 is involved in cell cycle regulation [ |
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| 3p21.31 | Truncating and missense mutations |
| Mutation in 8–16% of tumours [ | SETD2 is a histone methyltransferase controlling transcriptional regulation [ |
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| Xp11.2 | Truncating and missense mutations |
| Mutation in 4–8% of tumours [ | Histone demethylase, transcriptional regulation [ | Tumours with mutations in |
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| 5q21.2~q21.3 | Copy number loss or gain | NA | Copy number gain in 32–34% and loss in 52–56.2% of tumours [ | NA | Significant association of loss at 5q21.2~q21.3 with high grade tumours in patients with 3p loss [ |
| 5q22~q23 | Copy number loss or gain | NA | Gains in 48–52.4% and loss in 42.9–46% of tumours [ | NA | Gain at 5q22.3~q23.2 associated with smaller, low grade tumours and better disease specific survival; |
| 5q31–qter | Copy number gain | NA | Gain in of 56.8% ccRCCs [ | NA | Gain of 5q31–qter had better overall survival compared with patients without gain of 5q [ |
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| 8p | LOH | NA | LOH in 32-33% of RCC tissue specimen [ | NA | LOH on chromosomes 8p and 9p, a significant predictor of recurrence [ |
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| 9p | LOH | Possible candidate gene at 9p21 | LOH in 14–33% of RCC tissue specimen [ | p16 is the protein product of | Associated with high grade and stage, lymph node involvement, metastases, recurrence, and worse survival [ |
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| 14q | LOH | Possible | Loss in 38–55% of tumours [ | HIF1a is a transcription factor which regulates cellular response during hypoxia, for example, angiogenesis | Correlation of LOH at 14q with advanced stage, grade, larger tumour size, recurrence, and shorter cancer specific survival [ |
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| Chromosome 7 | Polysomy | NA | Polysomy 7 in 9.5–56.2% ccRCC [ | NA | Polysomy 7 associated with higher tumour grade, stage, and higher proliferative rate [ |
NA indicates not available.
| Chromosome | Type of genetic alteration | Candidate gene | Incidence | Function of protein | Prognosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chromosome 7 | Polysomy | NA | Polysomy 7 in 50–100% pRCC [ | NA | Polysomy 7 is not correlated with survival, clinical features, or proliferation rate of pRCC [ |
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| 7q31 | Missense mutation, gene duplication |
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| The c-met protein is involved in cell proliferation, motility, differentiation, invasion, and angiogenesis [ | One study showed association of increasing tumour stage with c-met expression and a trend of better overall survival in patients with no c-met expression in tumours [ |
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| Chromosome 17 | Polysomy | NA | Gains in 14.3–95.5% of pRCC [ | NA | Trisomy 17 associated with better prognosis (lower stage, less nodal involvement and metastases, longer survival) [ |
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| Chromosome Y | Loss | NA | Affects 71–87% of tumours in men [ | NA | Loss of chromosome Y not linked to pathological variables and survival [ |
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| Chromosome X | Loss | NA | Loss involving Xp in 28% and Xq in 36% of pRCC tumours [ | NA | Losses of chromosome Xp associated with short patient survival [ |
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| 3p | loss | NA | Allelic changes in 14–37.5% of tumours [ | NA | Loss of 3p associated with higher stage and grade, lymph node involvement, distant metastasis, larger tumour size, and worse survival [ |
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| Gains of 1q, chromosomes 12, 16, and 20; losses of 1p, 4q, 5q, 6q, 8p, 9p, 11, 13q, 14q, and 18 [ | Loss of 9p associated with higher stage, larger tumour size, metastasis, lymph node involvement, recurrence, and decreased survival [ | ||||
NA indicates not available.
| Tumour type | Chromosome | Type of genetic alteration | Candidate gene | Incidence | Function of protein | Prognosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| chRCC |
Losses at chromosomes 1 (73–90%), 2 (70–90%), 6 (62–96%), 10 (70–91%), 13 (51–86%), 17 (65–90%), and 21 (32–90%) [ | No relation between chromosomal numerical changes and the Paner grading system [ | ||||
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| RO | Loss or alterations of 1p (31–86%) [ | NA | ||||
| 11q13 | Translocation |
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| Cyclin D1 is involved in the regulation of cell cycle, G1-S phase, and cell proliferation | NA | |
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| CDRCC | Reported losses of chromosomes 1, 1p, 6, 8p, 9p, 14, 15, 16p, and 22 and gains in 13q in CDRCC tumours [ | NA | ||||
NA indicates not available.