Novel Mutations in the p16/CDKN2A Binding Region of the Cyclin-dependent Kinase-4 Gene

H Tsao, E Benoit, AJ Sober, C Thiele, FG Haluska - Cancer research, 1998 - AACR
H Tsao, E Benoit, AJ Sober, C Thiele, FG Haluska
Cancer research, 1998AACR
Mutations in genes that lie in the retinoblastoma pathway have been implicated in the
pathogenesis of many tumor types. Two critical components that determine progression from
G1 to S include p16/CDKN2A and CDK4. Alterations in p16/CDKN2A have been well
documented in multiple cancers, including melanoma. However, changes in CDK4 are
apparently more rare. Only two alterations, both at codon 24, have been identified in CDK4:
an activating arginine-to-cysteine transition and a germ-line arginine-to-histidine substitution …
Abstract
Mutations in genes that lie in the retinoblastoma pathway have been implicated in the pathogenesis of many tumor types. Two critical components that determine progression from G1 to S include p16/CDKN2A and CDK4. Alterations in p16/CDKN2A have been well documented in multiple cancers, including melanoma. However, changes in CDK4 are apparently more rare. Only two alterations, both at codon 24, have been identified in CDK4: an activating arginine-to-cysteine transition and a germ-line arginine-to-histidine substitution in one French kindred. In a survey of 20 neuroblastomas, 17 uncultured metastatic melanomas, 33 uncultured primary uveal melanomas, 8 colon cancer cell lines, and 20 primary colon cancer samples, we found no evidence of mutations in exon 2 of CDK4. From our cell lines derived from metastatic melanomas, we detected two alterations in the functionally critical exon 2 of CDK4: a lysine-to-glutamine transition at codon 22 and the arginine-to-histidine mutation at codon 24. These findings document several novel changes in the p16-binding region of CDK4.
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