Literature DB >> 8895759

Loss of the p16INK4a and p15INK4b genes, as well as neighboring 9p21 markers, in sporadic melanoma.

J F Flores1, G J Walker, J M Glendening, F G Haluska, J S Castresana, M P Rubio, G C Pastorfide, L A Boyer, W H Kao, M L Bulyk, R L Barnhill, N K Hayward, D E Housman, J W Fountain.   

Abstract

Although homozygous deletions of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2 gene p16INK4a on 9p21 have been reported frequently in metastatic melanoma cell lines, and intragenic mutations within the p16INK4a gene have been detected in familial melanoma kindreds, specific targeting of this gene in the development of sporadic melanoma in vivo remains controversial. Southern analyses were performed in this study to initially assess the frequency of hemi- or homozygous losses of p16INK4a, as well as its neighboring family member, p15INK4b, and other candidate regions within 9p21, in sporadic melanoma. Overall, 22 of 40 (55%) uncultured sporadic melanoma DNAs were determined to harbor deletions of 1-11 markers/genes located on 9p21. This included 10 tumors (25%; 10 of 40) with homozygous deletions limited to either the p16INK4a gene only (20%; 2 of 10), both the p16INK4a and p15INK4b genes (10%; 1 of 10), another novel 9p21 gene, FB19 (10%; 1 of 10), or all three of these genes plus surrounding markers (60%; 6 of 10). In subsequent single-strand conformation polymorphism and sequencing analyses, intragenic mutations in the p16INK4a gene were also revealed in two (10%; 2 of 21) melanoma DNAs that retained one copy of this locus. By comparison, the frequency of pl6INK4a and p15INK4b homozygous deletions, as well as p16INK4a mutations, in melanoma cell lines (analyzed in parallel) was 2-3-fold higher at 61 (23 of 38) and 24% (9 of 38), respectively. These findings indicate that (a) p16INK4a is inactivated in vivo in over one-fourth (27.5%; 11 of 40) of sporadic melanomas; (b) mutation/deletion of p16INK4a may confer a selective growth advantage in vitro; and (c) other 9p21 tumor suppressor genes could be targeted during the development of melanoma.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8895759

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  24 in total

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Review 2.  Genetic alterations of PTEN in human melanoma.

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4.  Localization of multiple melanoma tumor-suppressor genes on chromosome 11 by use of homozygosity mapping-of-deletions analysis.

Authors:  E K Goldberg; J M Glendening; Z Karanjawala; A Sridhar; G J Walker; N K Hayward; A J Rice; D Kurera; Y Tebha; J W Fountain
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Review 5.  Melanoma genetics and the development of rational therapeutics.

Authors:  Yakov Chudnovsky; Paul A Khavari; Amy E Adams
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6.  Methylation, a major mechanism of p16/CDKN2 gene inactivation in head and neck squamous carcinoma.

Authors:  A K El-Naggar; S Lai; G Clayman; J K Lee; M A Luna; H Goepfert; J G Batsakis
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7.  Components of the Rb pathway are critical targets of UV mutagenesis in a murine melanoma model.

Authors:  Karuppiah Kannan; Norman E Sharpless; Jin Xu; Ronan C O'Hagan; Marcus Bosenberg; Lynda Chin
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8.  Circulating DNA microsatellites: molecular determinants of response to biochemotherapy in patients with metastatic melanoma.

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9.  Survivin repression by p53, Rb and E2F2 in normal human melanocytes.

Authors:  Deepak Raj; Tong Liu; George Samadashwily; Fengzhi Li; Douglas Grossman
Journal:  Carcinogenesis       Date:  2007-10-04       Impact factor: 4.944

10.  Frequent p16-independent inactivation of p14ARF in human melanoma.

Authors:  Daniel E Freedberg; Sushila H Rigas; Julie Russak; Weiming Gai; Margarita Kaplow; Iman Osman; Faye Turner; Juliette A Randerson-Moor; Alan Houghton; Klaus Busam; D Timothy Bishop; Boris C Bastian; Julia A Newton-Bishop; David Polsky
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2008-05-27       Impact factor: 13.506

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