首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
2.
To understand genetic and epigenetic pathways in Wilms' tumors, we carried out a genome scan for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) using Affymetrix 10K single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) chips and supplemented the data with karyotype information. To score loss of imprinting (LOI) of the IGF2 gene, we assessed DNA methylation of the H19 5' differentially methylated region (DMR). Few chromosomal regions other than band 11p13 (WT1) were lost in Wilms' tumors from Denys-Drash and Wilms' tumor-aniridia syndromes, whereas sporadic Wilms' tumors showed LOH of several regions, most frequently 11p15 but also 1p, 4q, 7p, 11q, 14q, 16q, and 17p. LOI was common in the sporadic Wilms' tumors but absent in the syndromic cases. The SNP chips identified novel centers of LOH in the sporadic tumors, including a 2.4-Mb minimal region on chromosome 4q24-q25. Losses of chromosomes 1p, 14q, 16q, and 17p were more common in tumors presenting at an advanced stage; 11p15 LOH was seen at all stages, whereas LOI was associated with early-stage presentation. Wilms' tumors with LOI often completely lacked LOH in the genome-wide analysis, and in some tumors with concomitant 16q LOH and LOI, the loss of chromosome 16q was mosaic, whereas the H19 DMR methylation was complete. These findings confirm molecular differences between sporadic and syndromic Wilms' tumors, define regions of recurrent LOH, and indicate that gain of methylation at the H19 DMR is an early event in Wilms' tumorigenesis that is independent of chromosomal losses. The data further suggest a biological difference between sporadic Wilms' tumors with and without LOI.  相似文献   

3.
We have isolated a new marker (cos11-5TH) that detects an MspI restriction fragment length polymorphism in the 5 region of the human tyrosine hydroxylase gene (TH) on chromosome band 11p15.5. This region of human chromosome 11 contains several important loci for disease phenotypes including Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS), Wilms' tumor, and embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. Thus, identification of new polymorphic markers in this region are important for future gene mapping and linkage analyses. To better define the region of 11p15.5 deleted in embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, this new marker was used to investigate allelic losses in embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma tumors.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Gastrinomas are pancreatic endocrine neoplasms that arise either sporadically or are inherited as part of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type I syndrome (MEN I). Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in the region flanking the MEN I gene at chromosome 11q13 has been documented in a few sporadic and familial pancreatic endocrine tumors, but not previously in sporadic gastrinomas. It has therefore been suggested that gastrinomas develop by a mechanism different from other tumors associated with the MENI syndsrome. We report LOH on chromosome 11 in 5 of 11 sporadic gastrinomas. Four of these tumors have LOH for markers flanking the MEN I region. Molecular evaluation of segments of chromosomes 3, 13, and 17 known to contain cloned or putative tumor suppressor genes fail to show LOH except at one locus in one tumor. These data suggest that a tumor suppressor DNA segment exists at 11q13 that may be involved in the development of sporadic gastrinomas.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Sporadic childhood tumors associated with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) all show abnormalities of the same region on chromosome 11. In addition to chromosome 11, other chromosome regions are affected in some of these tumor types. In this study we analyzed the region on chromosome 1p involved in the etiology of BWS-associated tumors, Wilms tumor, rhabdomyosarcoma, and hepatoblastoma. For this purpose we determined the location of two novel translocation breakpoints in this chromosome region in cells from a Wilms tumor and cells from a rhabdomyosarcoma. We constructed a map of the region and found that both breakpoints are separated by at least 875 kb. We identified a PAC clone which crosses the rhabdomyosarcoma breakpoint and found several exons within this clone. We established that this breakpoint is located proximal to the PAX7 gene and, therefore, identified a new region involved in the etiology of rhabdomyosarcomas.  相似文献   

7.
WT2 is defined by a maternal-specific loss of heterozygosity on human chromosome 11p15.5 in Wilms' and other embryonal tumors. Therefore, the imprinted genes in this region are candidates for involvement in Wilms' tumorigenesis. We now report a novel imprinted gene, KCNQ1DN (KCNQ1 downstream neighbor). This gene is located between p57(KIP2) and KvLQT1 (KCNQ1) of 11p15.5 within the WT2 critical region. KCNQ1DN is imprinted and expressed from the maternal allele. We examined the expression of KCNQ1DN in Wilms' tumors. Seven of eighteen (39%) samples showed no expression. In contrast, other maternal imprinted genes in this region, including p57(KIP2), IMPT1, and IPL exhibited almost normal expression in these samples, although some samples expressed IGF2 biallelically. These results suggest that KCNQ1DN existing far from the H19/IGF2 region may play some role in Wilms' tumorigenesis along with IGF2.  相似文献   

8.
Comparative histological data suggest that papillary renal cell tumors in adults and Wilms' tumors in children develop from maturation-arrested cells of similar origin. Wilms' tumor is characterized by genetic changes at the chromosome 11p region. In the present study, we have analyzed 10 papillary and 10 non-papillary renal cell tumors and determined the allelic status of 6 loci on the short arm of chromosome 11. Only one papillary renal cell carcinoma among the 20 tumors showed a loss of constitutional heterozygosity for the chromosome 11p region. These data suggest that separate molecular events occur in the development of Wilms' tumor and papillary renal cell tumors, subsequent to the proliferation of maturation-arrested cells of the kidney.  相似文献   

9.
A sporadic Wilms tumor, WT-21, with an (11;14)-(p13;q23) reciprocal translocation has been identified. The translocation is found in tumor cells, but not in the patients' circulating lymphocytes. Molecular analysis of somatic cell hybrids segregating the derivative translocation chromosomes reveals a submicroscopic interstitial deletion at the translocation breakpoint, as well as a cytologically undetectable interstitial deletion in the nontranslocation chromosome 11, resulting in a homozygous deletion in 11p13. Pulsed-field gel analysis of tumor DNA indicates that the two deletions are indistinguishable, and the homozygously deleted region is less than 875 kb. The homozygously deleted regions of three other sporadic Wilms tumors overlap with the deleted region in WT-21, and the candidate cDNA clone for the 11p13 Wilms tumor gene described by Call et al. (Cell 60, 509-520, 1990) is included in the deleted region. These findings strengthen previous conclusions regarding the obligate location for the 11p13 WT locus and support the suggestion that the Wilms tumor gene has been cloned.  相似文献   

10.
Children with associated Wilms' tumor, aniridia, genitourinary malformations, and mental retardation (WAGR syndrome) frequently have a cytogenetically visible germ line deletion of chromosomal band 11p13. In accordance with the Knudson hypothesis of two-hit carcinogenesis, the absence of this chromosomal band suggests that loss of both alleles of a gene at 11p13 causes Wilms' tumor. Consistent with this model, chromosomes from sporadically occurring Wilms' tumor cells frequently show loss of allelic heterozygosity at polymorphic 11p15 loci, and therefore it has been assumed that allelic loss extends proximally to include 11p13. We report here that in samples from five sporadic Wilms' tumors, allelic loss occurred distal to the WAGR locus on 11p13. In cells from one tumor, mitotic recombination occurred distal to the gamma-globin gene on 11p15.5. Thus, allelic loss in sporadic Wilms' tumor cells may involve a second locus on 11p.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The development of Wilms tumor (WT) has been associated with the inactivation of a "tumor suppressor" locus in human chromosome 11 band p13. Several WTs that exhibit homozygous deletions of an 11p13 candidate WT gene in its entirety have been reported. We report here a partial deletion of the candidate gene which, upon comparison with other documented homozygous deletions, permitted a precise definition of the critical genomic target in Wilms tumor. The smallest region of overlap between these deletions is a 16-kb segment of DNA encompassing the 5' exon(s) of an 11p13 gene coding for a zinc finger protein, together with an associated CpG island. This finding supports the notion that the candidate gene in question corresponds to the 11p13 WT1 Wilms tumor locus.  相似文献   

13.
Although the occurrence of bladder cancer is common, the molecular events underlying the pathogenesis of this cancer remain ill-defined. A loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at specific chromosomal loci may predispose individuals to the development of bladder cancer but this has not been examined in detail. Furthermore, the role that deletion or inactivation of putative tumour suppressor genes might play in the genesis of bladder cancer has not been established. In this study, allelic deletion analysis on the short arm of chromosome 17 of patients with primary bladder tumours failed to show deletion at 17p13 (0/7), a region known to contain the p53 tumour suppressor gene. Chromosome 11p15 showed allelic deletion at the IGF2 locus (2/7: 29%) and the PTH locus (1/11: 9%). However, no deletion was observed at the CALCA locus (0/6). LOH at 11p13, a region containing the Wilm's tumour suppressor gene (WT1), was also studied. Analysis of LOH at 11p13 showed deletion at the CAT locus (13/18: 72%), the J/D11S414 locus (5/15: 33%), the WT1 locus (7/14: 50%) and the FSHB locus (6/16: 38%). The significance of these findings is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Seventy-seven patients with aniridia, referred for cytogenetic analysis predominantly to assess Wilms tumor risk, were studied by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), through use of a panel of cosmids encompassing the aniridia-associated PAX6 gene, the Wilms tumor predisposition gene WT1, and flanking markers, in distal chromosome 11p13. Thirty patients were found to be chromosomally abnormal. Cytogenetically visible interstitial deletions involving 11p13 were found in 13 patients, 11 of which included WT1. A further 13 patients had cryptic deletions detectable only by FISH, 3 of which included WT1. Six of these, with deletions <500 kb, share a similar proximal breakpoint within a cosmid containing the last 10 exons of PAX6 and part of the neighboring gene, ELP4. Two of these six patients were mosaic for the deletion. The remaining four had chromosomal rearrangements: an unbalanced translocation, t(11;13), with a deletion including the WAGR (Wilms' tumor, aniridia, genitourinary abnormalities, and mental retardation) region, and three balanced rearrangements with what appear to be position effect breakpoints 3' of PAX6: (a) a t(7;11) with the 11p13 breakpoint approximately 30 kb downstream of PAX6, (b) a dir ins(12;11) with a breakpoint >50 kb from PAX6, and (c) an inv(11)(p13q13) with a breakpoint >75 kb downstream of PAX6. The proportion and spectrum of chromosome anomalies in familial (4/14, or 28.5%) and sporadic (26/63, or 41%) cases are not significantly different. An unexpectedly high frequency of chromosomal rearrangements is associated with both sporadic and familial aniridia in this cohort.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Genes implicated in the development of Wilms' tumour (WT) and aniridia (AN2) have been localised to a subregion of band p13 on chromosome 11 by molecular and cytogenetic characterisation of WAGR syndrome patients carrying variable constitutional deletions. Polymorphic markers for the region would be valuable for linkage analysis in the familial forms of both Wilms' tumour and aniridia, as well as for studying somatic rearrangements of chromosome 11 in a variety of tumour types. Here we describe the isolation and characterisation of three frequently polymorphic arbitrary DNA fragments that map proximal to the AN2 and WT loci.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The short arm of chromosome 11 carries genes involved in malformation syndromes, including the aniridia/genitourinary abnormalities/mental retardation (WAGR) syndrome and the Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome, both of which are associated with an increased risk of childhood malignancy. Evidence comes from constitutional chromosomal aberrations and from losses of heterozygosity, limited to tumor cells, involving regions 11p13 and 11p15. In order to map the genes involved more precisely, we have fused a mouse cell line with cell lines from patients with constitutional deletions or translocations. Characterization of somatic cell hybrids with 11p-specific DNA markers has allowed us to subdivide the short arm into 11 subregions, 7 of which belong to band 11p13. We have thus defined the smallest region of overlap for the Wilms' tumor locus bracketed by the closest proximal and distal breakpoints in two of these hybrids. The region associated with the Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome spans the region flanked by two 11p15.5 markers, HRAS1 and HBB. These hybrids also represent useful tools for mapping new markers to this region of the human genome.  相似文献   

17.
We have isolated a DNA segment absent from all the constitutionally deleted chromosomes 11 of our patients with Wilms tumor. This marker separates two balanced translocations that break in band 11p13: the distal one associated with aniridia (AN2), and the proximal one with genitourinary dysplasia (GUD). The GUD breakpoint maps within the smallest region of overlap (SRO) for the Wilms tumor (WT) gene locus, thus strengthening the previous suggestion of an association between Wilms tumor and other abnormalities of the genitourinary system. The 11p13 translocation breakpoint associated with T-cell acute lymphatic leukemia (T-ALL) is centromeric to the SRO and separated from the WT locus by at least one known gene. This region of the human genome (11p13) is rich in CpG islands that potentially identify genes, some of which may be involved in the various phenotypes associated with the WAGR syndrome. This is consistent with the proposition that the majority of human genes are in G-negative bands.  相似文献   

18.
Although information on the molecular pathways in radiation carcinogenesis is accumulating, the data are still relatively scanty. To find the tumor suppressor locus associated with radiation carcinogenesis, we determined the frequency and distribution of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of X-ray-induced thymic lymphomas of B6C3F(1) mice using 58 microsatellite markers and compared the results with those for spontaneous lymphomas and N-ethylnitrosourea (ENU)-induced lymphomas. Based on the results, we describe a unique locus with frequent LOH in the centromeric region of chromosome 11 of X-ray-induced lymphomas. This locus has never been observed to be altered similarly in either ENU-induced or spontaneous lymphomas, suggesting radiation-specific molecular alteration. The LOH patterns of individual thymic lymphomas indicated that the common region of LOH was located within 1.6 cM between D11Mit62 and D11Mit204, a region syntenic to human chromosome 7p13. Linkage analysis revealed that the markers of the common LOH region were genetically linked to Ikaros (now known as Znfn1a1), a master gene of lymphopoiesis. Although the presence of radiation-associated LOH in other loci cannot be ruled out, these results suggest a novel molecular pathway in induction of thymic lymphomas by ionizing radiation.  相似文献   

19.
The inactivation of two alleles at a locus on the short arm of chromosome 11 (band 11p13) has been suggested to be critical steps in the development of Wilms tumor (WT), a childhood kidney tumor. Two similar candidate WT cDNA clones (WT33 and LK15) have recently been identified on the basis of both their expression in fetal kidney and their location within the smallest region of overlap of somatic 11p13 deletions in some tumors. These homozygous deletions, however, are large and potentially affect more than one gene. Using a cDNA probe to the candidate gene, we have analyzed DNA from both normal and tumor tissue from WT patients, in an effort to detect rearrangements at this locus. We report here a patient with bilateral WT who is heterozygous for a small (less than 11 kb) germinal deletion within this candidate gene. DNA from both tumors is homozygous for this intragenic deletion allele, which, by RNA-PRC sequence analysis, is predicted to encode a protein truncated by 180 amino acids. These data support the identification of this locus as an 11p13 WT gene (WT1) and provide direct molecular data supporting the two-hit mutational model for WT.  相似文献   

20.
Children with constitutional deletions of chromosome 11p13 suffer from aniridia, genitourinary malformations, and mental retardation and are predisposed to develop bilateral Wilms tumor (the WAGR syndrome). The critical region for these defects has been narrowed to a segment of band 11p13 between the catalase and the beta-follicle-stimulating hormone genes. In this report, we have cloned the endpoints from a WAGR patient whose large cytogenetic deletion, del(11)(p14.3::p13), does not include the catalase gene. The deletion was characterized using DNA polymorphisms and found to originate in the paternally derived chromosome 11. The distal endpoint was identified as a rearrangement of locus D11S21 in conventional Southern blots of the patient's genomic DNA, but was not detected in leukocyte DNA from either parent or in sperm DNA from the father. The proximal endpoint was isolated by cloning the junction fragment and was mapped in relation to other markers and breakpoints. It defines a new locus in 11p13-delta J, which is close to the Wilms tumor gene and the breakpoint cluster region (TCL2) of the frequent t(11;14)(p13;q11) translocation in acute T-cell leukemia. An unusual concentration of base pair substitutions was discovered at delta J, in which 9 of 44 restriction sites tested (greater than 20%) vary in the population. This property makes delta J one of the most polymorphic loci on chromosome 11 and may reflect an underlying instability that contributed to the original mutation. The breakpoint extends the genetic map of this region and provides a useful marker for linkage studies and the analysis of allelic segregation in tumor cells.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号