The topoisomerase I poison CPT-11 has proved efficient for the treatment of untreated metastatic colorectal cancers (CRC) and those refractory to fluoropyrimidines. However, the interpatient ...variability is important. A previous in vitro study suggested that measurements of the level of topoisomerase I-DNA intermediates trapped by camptothecin may be useful to estimate the chemosensitivity of colon carcinoma cell lines. To verify this hypothesis, we developed an immuno-assay to detect covalent topoisomerase I-DNA complexes in a series of human colorectal cancers xenografted in nude mice. Six human CRCs were selected for their distinctive p53 and microsatellite instability (MSI) status. Tumour lysates, prepared from mice untreated or treated with CPT-11, were fractionated onto CsCl gradients to separate free and DNA-bound topoisomerase I by centrifugation. Interestingly, significant levels of DNA-topoisomerase I complexes were detected in the tumours most responsive to the treatment with CPT-11, irrespective of their MSI and p53 phenotypes. Our in vivo study fully agrees with the predictions from the in vitro data indicating that evaluation of topoisomerase I-DNA complexes would be useful to predict the response of CRC to a treatment with CPT-11.
Malignant rhabdoid tumors are rare and aggressive neoplasms of childhood, occurring in the kidney or in various extrarenal locations. Most cytogenetic studies of these tumors have shown the frequent ...involvement of chromosome 22, including translocations and/or deletions, with a critical region for a rhabdoid tumor gene mapping to chromosome segment 22q11, close to BCR. We report a case of an extrarenal rhabdoid tumor with a t(1;22)(p36;q11.2) that was associated with deletions of chromosomes 1 and 22. We have performed fluorescence in situ hybridization to bracket the translocation breakpoints on both chromosomes and microsatellite analysis to establish the deletion of chromosome 22 more precisely. The chromosome 22 translocation breakpoint is localized close to BCR, in the region covered by the overlapping YACs 446B5 and 361D9, and it is associated with a proximal hemizygous deletion of approximatively 2 Mb. On chromosome 1, the translocation breakpoint maps to a 25 cM region, proximal to D1Z2 and distal to PND, and is also associated with an estimated deletion of 8 Mb. Moreover, microsatellite analysis has demonstrated a homozygous deletion of chromosome 22 for three contiguous loci, immediately distal to BCR. This result suggests that a tumor suppressor gene involved in rhabdoid tumor oncogenesis could be localized in this region of chromosome 22. Genes Chromosomes Cancer 21:82–89, 1998. Published 1998 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
This article is a US Government work and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America.
Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is an inherited predisposition to colorectal and endometrial cancers caused by germline mutation of mismatch repair genes, with hMLH1 and hMSH2 ...underlying the majority of the cases. Although lymphoid tumors are the most common tumors in mouse models for HNPCC, lymphomas are almost never encountered in patients who have HNPCC, except in rare families with germline homozygous deletion of hMLH1. We report the case of a 53-year-old man who had a history of colon cancers related to constitutional hMLH1 mutation and who was diagnosed as having a duodenal follicular lymphoma. This diagnosis was supported by IgH-BCL2 rearrangement and BCL2 immunoreactivity in tumor cells. The association of both of these possibly related rare diseases has never been reported. To clarify this relationship, we searched for hMLH1 expression and mismatch repair deficiency in the duodenal lymphoma. hMLH1 immunostaining was positive in lymphoid tumor cells, and no microsatellite instability was detected. In agreement with mouse models for HNPCC, these results suggest the involvement of alternative mechanisms to complete mismatch repair deficiency for lymphomagenesis in HNPCC syndrome.
The recently identified tumor-suppressor gene TSLC1 on chromosome 11q23.2 is frequently inactivated in human non-small cell lung adenocarcinoma by DNA methylation-associated silencing. The aim of ...this study was to determine if TSLC1 is inactivated in adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. We analyzed 17 pancreatic cancer cell lines, 91 primary pancreatic adenocarcinoma, 46 pancreatic intraepithelial (PanIN) precursor lesions and 15 microscopically normal pancreata for methylation of the 5' CpG island of the TSLC1 gene through methylation-specific PCR. We observed 5' CpG methylation of TSLC1 in 4 of 17 cell lines (24%). In each cell line the aberrant methylation was associated with loss of TSLC1 expression by RT-PCR that was reversible after treatment with the DNA methyl-transferase inhibitor 5-aza-2'- deoxycytidine. Furthermore, we observed that TSLC1 was methylated in 25 of 91 primary pancreatic adenocarcinomas (27%), and in 2 of 7 highgrade PanIN-3 lesions (29%), but not in low-grade PanIN (0 of 9 PanlN-2 and 0 of 30 PanIN-1) lesions or in normal pancreata (n=15). We conclude that epigenetic silencing of TSLC1 expression through 5' CpG island associated methylation is common in pancreatic adenocarcinoma and is a late event in pancreatic neoplastic development.
Oncogene vol 24, p 7094-7104 (2005) Specific HPV DNA sequences are associated with more than 90% of invasive
carcinomas of the uterine cervix. Viral E6 and E7 oncogenes are key mediators
in cell ...transformation by disrupting TP53 and RB pathways. To investigate
molecular mechanisms involved in the progression of invasive cervical
carcinoma, we performed a gene expression study on cases selected according to
viral and clinical parameters. Using Coupled Two-Way Clustering and Sorting
Points Into Neighbourhoods methods, we identified a Cervical Cancer
Proliferation Cluster composed of 163 highly correlated transcripts, many of
which corresponded to E2F pathway genes controlling cell proliferation, whereas
no primary TP53 targets were present in this cluster. The average expression
level of the genes of this cluster was higher in tumours with an early relapse
than in tumours with a favourable course (P=0.026). Moreover, we found that
E6/E7 mRNA expression level was positively correlated with the expression level
of the cluster genes and with viral DNA load. These findings suggest that HPV
E6/E7 expression level plays a key role in the progression of invasive
carcinoma of the uterine cervix via the deregulation of cellular genes
controlling tumour cell proliferation. HPV expression level may thus correspond
to a biological marker useful for prognosis assessment and specific therapy of
the disease.