Instabilotyping: comprehensive identification of frameshift mutations caused by coding region microsatellite instability

Y Mori, J Yin, A Rashid, BA Leggett, J Young, L Simms… - Cancer research, 2001 - AACR
Y Mori, J Yin, A Rashid, BA Leggett, J Young, L Simms, PM Kuehl, P Langenberg, SJ Meltzer
Cancer research, 2001AACR
Coding region frameshift mutation caused by microsatellite instability (MSI) is one
mechanism contributing to tumorigenesis in cancers with MSI in high frequency. Mutation of
TGFBR2 is one example of this process. To identify additional examples, a large-scale
genomic screen of coding region microsatellites was conducted. 1115 coding
homopolymeric loci with six or more nucleotides were identified in an online genetic
database. Mutational screening was performed at 152 of these loci in 46 colorectal tumors …
Abstract
Coding region frameshift mutation caused by microsatellite instability (MSI) is one mechanism contributing to tumorigenesis in cancers with MSI in high frequency. Mutation of TGFBR2 is one example of this process. To identify additional examples, a large-scale genomic screen of coding region microsatellites was conducted. 1115 coding homopolymeric loci with six or more nucleotides were identified in an online genetic database. Mutational screening was performed at 152 of these loci in 46 colorectal tumors with MSI in high frequency. Nine loci were mutated in ≥20% of tumors, 10 loci in 10–20%, 24 loci in 5–10%, 43 loci in <5%, and 66 loci were not mutated in any tumors. The most frequently mutated novel loci were the activin type II receptor gene (58.1%), SEC63 (48.8%), AIM 2 (47.6%), a gene encoding a subunit of the NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase complex (27.9%), a homologue of mouse cordon-bleu (23.8%), and EBP1/PA2G4 (20.9%). This genome-wide approach identifies coding region MSI in genes or pathways not implicated previously in colorectal tumorigenesis, which may merit functional study or other additional analysis.
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