An X Chromosome Gene, WTX, Is Commonly Inactivated in Wilms Tumor

MN Rivera, WJ Kim, J Wells, DR Driscoll… - Science, 2007 - science.org
MN Rivera, WJ Kim, J Wells, DR Driscoll, BW Brannigan, M Han, JC Kim, AP Feinberg
Science, 2007science.org
Wilms tumor is a pediatric kidney cancer associated with inactivation of the WT1 tumor-
suppressor gene in 5 to 10% of cases. Using a high-resolution screen for DNA copy-number
alterations in Wilms tumor, we identified somatic deletions targeting a previously
uncharacterized gene on the X chromosome. This gene, which we call WTX, is inactivated in
approximately one-third of Wilms tumors (15 of 51 tumors). Tumors with mutations in WTX
lack WT1 mutations, and both genes share a restricted temporal and spatial expression …
Wilms tumor is a pediatric kidney cancer associated with inactivation of the WT1 tumor-suppressor gene in 5 to 10% of cases. Using a high-resolution screen for DNA copy-number alterations in Wilms tumor, we identified somatic deletions targeting a previously uncharacterized gene on the X chromosome. This gene, which we call WTX, is inactivated in approximately one-third of Wilms tumors (15 of 51 tumors). Tumors with mutations in WTX lack WT1 mutations, and both genes share a restricted temporal and spatial expression pattern in normal renal precursors. In contrast to biallelic inactivation of autosomal tumor-suppressor genes, WTX is inactivated by a monoallelic “single-hit” event targeting the single X chromosome in tumors from males and the active X chromosome in tumors from females.
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