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Loss of genetic information in central nervous system tumors common to children and young adults

✍ Scribed by C. David James; Ju He; Elisabeth Carlbom; Tom Mikkelsen; Per-Ake Ridderheim; Webster K. Cavenee; Dr. V. Peter Collins


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
773 KB
Volume
2
Category
Article
ISSN
1045-2257

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The clonal loss of genetic information as revealed by the comparison of normal and tumor DNA restriction fragment length alleles has permitted the determination of the genomic positions of cancer‐recessive mutations. Here we have applied this approach to the analysis of 19 central nervous system tumors that constitute four histologic groups and occur most frequently in children and young adults. The detectable loss of genetic information from cases of medulloblastoma (11 examined) indicates that among such tumors, loss occurs most frequently from the short arm of chromosome 17. For the ependymomas examined (four cases), chromosome 22 was the preferred site for detectable loss. Analysis of pilocytic astrocytomas of the cerebellum (three cases) failed to reveal genetic alterations of any type among such tumors, a finding unique to this histologic group. The single choroid plexus papilloma examined demonstrated loss of genetic information from chromosome 3. Among the 19 tumors, multiple cases of loss were observed from chromosomes 10, 11, 13, and 22, and from the short arm of chromosome 17. Therefore, with regard to the chromosomal locations of implied tumor suppressor genes, these results are consistent with those described for intracranial tumors occurring more commonly in adults of middle to advanced age.


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