Genetic mechanisms of tumor-specific loss of 11p DNA sequences in Wilms tumor.

DD Dao, WT Schroeder, LY Chao… - American journal of …, 1987 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
DD Dao, WT Schroeder, LY Chao, H Kikuchi, LC Strong, VM Riccardi, S Pathak, WW Nichols…
American journal of human genetics, 1987ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Wilms tumor, a common childhood renal tumor, occurs in both a heritable and a
nonheritable form. The heritable form may occasionally be attributed to a chromosome
deletion at 11p13, and tumors from patients with normal constitutional chromosomes often
show deletion or rearrangement of 11p13. It has been suggested that a germinal or somatic
mutation may occur on one chromosome 11 and predispose to Wilms tumor and that a
subsequent somatic genetic event on the normal homologue at 11p13 may permit tumor …
Abstract
Wilms tumor, a common childhood renal tumor, occurs in both a heritable and a nonheritable form. The heritable form may occasionally be attributed to a chromosome deletion at 11p13, and tumors from patients with normal constitutional chromosomes often show deletion or rearrangement of 11p13. It has been suggested that a germinal or somatic mutation may occur on one chromosome 11 and predispose to Wilms tumor and that a subsequent somatic genetic event on the normal homologue at 11p13 may permit tumor development. To study the frequency and mechanism of such tumor-specific genetic events, we have examined the karyotype and chromosome 11 genotype of normal and tumor tissues from 13 childhood renal tumor patients with different histologic tumor types and associated clinical conditions. Tumors of eight of the 12 Wilms tumor patients, including all viable tumors examined directly, show molecular evidence of loss of 11p DNA sequences by somatic recombination (four cases), chromosome loss (two cases), and recombination (two cases) or chromosome loss and duplication. One malignant rhabdoid tumor in a patient heterozygous for multiple 11p markers did not show any tumor-specific 11p alteration. These findings confirm the critical role of 11p sequences in Wilms tumor development and reveal that mitotic recombination may be the most frequent mechanism by which tumors develop.
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