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Molecular evaluation of abnormalities of the short arm of chromosome I in neuroblastoma

✍ Scribed by Jay D. Hunt; Dr. Allan Tereba


Book ID
102844491
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
900 KB
Volume
2
Category
Article
ISSN
1045-2257

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Cytogenetic analyses have documented the consistent deletion of part of the short arm of chromosome 1 in neuroblastoma cells suggesting the presence of a suppressor gene in this chromosomal region. To determine the smallest region of deletion overlap at the molecular level on independently derived tumors and to define the location of the breakpoints more precisely, Southern analyses were performed on a somatic cell hybrid panel containing the normal and altered chromosomes 1 from seven neuroblastoma lines. By this method we were able to analyze a panel of 20 cloned sequences and two isozymes to determine the location of the breakpoints. Our findings indicate that the proximal breakpoints of chromosome 1 deletions range over a distance of more than 50 cM with the most distal deletion breakpoint occurring between MYCL1 and DIS57. In addition, using restriction fragment length polymorphisms, it was determined that in at least three of the five cell lines in which MYCL1 was deleted from a chromosome I, the gene was translocated to another chromosome thus retaining the diploid complement. We propose that the neuroblastoma susceptibility gene is located distal to MYCL1 and that there is another gene which is linked to MYCL1 that may be involved in this neoplasm.


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## Abstract The short arm of chromosome Ip is the most frequently altered chromosome segment in neuroblastoma. The alterations, mainly deletions, are thought to be indicative of the presence of a tumor suppressor gene. To further refine the chromosome localization of this gene, we have studied pair