Analysis of the p16 gene (CDKN2) as a candidate for the chromosome 9p melanoma susceptibility locus

A Kamb, D Shattuck-Eidens, R Eeles, Q Liu, NA Gruis… - Nature …, 1994 - nature.com
A Kamb, D Shattuck-Eidens, R Eeles, Q Liu, NA Gruis, W Ding, C Hussey, T Tran, Y Miki…
Nature genetics, 1994nature.com
A locus for familial melanoma, MLM, has been mapped within the same interval on
chromosome 9p21 as the gene for a putative cell cycle regulator, p16INK4 (CDKN2) MTS1.
This gene is homozygously deleted from many tumour cell lines including melanomas,
suggesting that CDKN2 is a good candidate for MLM. We have analysed CDKN2 coding
sequences in pedigrees segregating 9p melanoma susceptibility and 38 other melanoma-
prone families. In only two families were potential predisposing mutations identified. No …
Abstract
A locus for familial melanoma, MLM, has been mapped within the same interval on chromosome 9p21 as the gene for a putative cell cycle regulator, p16INK4 (CDKN2) MTS1. This gene is homozygously deleted from many tumour cell lines including melanomas, suggesting that CDKN2 is a good candidate for MLM. We have analysed CDKN2 coding sequences in pedigrees segregating 9p melanoma susceptibility and 38 other melanoma-prone families. In only two families were potential predisposing mutations identified. No evidence was found for heterozygous deletions of CDKN2 in the germline of melanoma-prone individuals. The low frequency of potential predisposing mutations detected suggests that either the majority of mutations fall outside the CDKN2 coding sequence or that CDKN2 is not MLM.
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