A new approach is applied in the mapping of tumor suppressor genes: analysis of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) in concordant tumors of monozygotic and dizygotic twins. The method relies on recognition of genome locations undergoing loss in both twins in a high proportion of the set of all twin pairs e
Search for unknown tumor-antagonizing genes
โ Scribed by Stephan Imreh; George Klein; Eugene R. Zabarovsky
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 378 KB
- Volume
- 38
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1045-2257
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Following the ingenious prediction of Alfred Knudson in 1971, the first tumor suppressor gene, RB1, has been isolated. Its product, the RB1 protein, was found to play a major role in the control of the cell cycle. The loss of heterozygosity (LOH) technique, introduced by Cavenee and colleagues, was an important milestone toward the confirmation of Knudson's hypothesis and the identification of the gene. Subsequently, the LOH technique has provided important clues that have led to the discovery of other tumor suppressor genes. Most of them play important roles in the regulation of the cell cycle and/or of apoptosis. Circumstantial evidence suggests that still other and perhaps many unknown genes may participate in the protection of the organism against malignant growth. The numerous genome losses in tumors, detected by LOH, comparative genomic hybridization, and by cytogenetic techniques, support this possibility. The early work of one of us (G.K.), together with Henry Harris and Francis Wiener, had shown that the malignant phenotype can be suppressed by hybridizing malignant with lowโ or nonโtumorigenic cells. However, analysis of this phenomenon failed to assign the inhibition of tumorigenicity to any particular gene. We have pursued the search for new tumorโantagonizing genes with two unconventional approaches, focusing on human chromosomal subband 3p21.3, a region frequently targeted by cytogenetically detectable deletions. We have detected four clusters of candidate tumor suppressor genes at 3p21.3 by a combination of deletion mapping and the โelimination test.โ These findings raise the question whether the number and variety of genes that may contribute to the defense against uncontrolled proliferation may have been underestimated. ยฉ 2003 WileyโLiss, Inc.
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