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Allelic imbalance, including deletion of PTEN/MMAC1, at the Cowden disease locus on 10q22-23, in hamartomas from patients with cowden syndrome and germline PTEN mutation

✍ Scribed by Debbie J. Marsh; Patricia L. M. Dahia; Valérie Coulon; Zimu Zheng; Françoise Dorion-Bonnet; Katherine M. Call; Randall Little; Albert Y. Lin; Rosalind A. Eeles; Alisa M. Goldstein; Shirley V. Hodgson; Anne-Louise Richardson; Bruce G. Robinson; H. Christian Weber; Michel Longy; Charis Eng


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
174 KB
Volume
21
Category
Article
ISSN
1045-2257

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✦ Synopsis


Cowden disease (CD) is a rare, autosomal dominant inherited cancer syndrome characterized by multiple benign and malignant lesions in a wide spectrum of tissues. While individuals with CD have an increased risk of breast and thyroid neoplasms, the primary features of CD are hamartomas. The gene for CD has been mapped by linkage analysis to a 6 cM region on the long arm of chromosome 10 at 10q22-23. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) studies of sporadic follicular thyroid adenomas and carcinomas, both component tumors of CD, have suggested that the putative susceptibility gene for CD is a tumor suppressor gene. Somatic missense and nonsense mutations have recently been identified in breast, prostate, and brain tumor cell lines in a gene encoding a dual specificity phosphatase, PTEN/MMAC1, mapped at 10q23.3. Furthermore, germline PTEN/MMAC1 mutations are associated with CD. In the present study, 20 hamartomas from 11 individuals belonging to ten unrelated families with CD have been examined for LOH of markers flanking and within PTEN/MMAC1. Eight of these ten families have germline PTEN/MMAC1 mutations. LOH involving microsatellite markers within the CD interval, and including PTEN/MMAC1, was identified in two fibroadenomas of the breast, a thyroid adenoma, and a pulmonary hamartoma belonging to 3 of 11 (27%) of these patients. The wild-type allele was lost in these hamartomas. Semi-quantitative PCR performed on RNA from hamartomas from three different tissues from a CD patient suggested substantial reduction of PTEN/MMAC1 RNA levels in all of these tissues. The LOH identified in samples from individuals with CD and the suggestion of allelic loss and reduced transcription in hamartomas from a CD patient provide evidence that PTEN/MMAC1 functions as a tumor suppressor in CD.