| Literature DB >> 8938136 |
G Keller1, V Grimm, H Vogelsang, P Bischoff, J Mueller, J R Siewert, H Höfler.
Abstract
We examined 30 gastric-cancer patients with a varying degree of family history of stomach cancer and/or synchronous gastric tumors for microsatellite instability. We observed microsatellite instability at at least 1 of 8 loci tested in tumors of 14/30 patients; of these 14, 8 had single locus alterations and 6 had alterations at at least half of the 8 loci. Among the patients with microsatellite instability at > or = 4 loci, 3 patients showed a strong familial clustering of gastric cancer. Mutation analysis of the DNA mismatch repair gene hMLHl on paired non-tumorous and tumor DNA from 10 patients, 6 with microsatellite instability at > or = 4 loci and 4 with an alteration at one locus, revealed a novel missense mutation, present in the normal and tumor DNA of one patient with microsatellite instability at multiple loci in his tumor. His family history of cancer included one second-degree relative affected with gastric cancer. These data suggest that germline mutations in the hMLHl gene occur in some gastric-cancer patients and that in the majority of cases microsatellite instability in gastric tumors may be due to defects in other genes responsible for DNA replication fidelity than the hMLHl.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8938136 DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0215(19961127)68:5<571::AID-IJC3>3.0.CO;2-W
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396