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High Mutability of the Tumor Suppressor Genes RASSF1 and RBSP3 (CTDSPL) in Cancer

BACKGROUND: Many different genetic alterations are observed in cancer cells. Individual cancer genes display point mutations such as base changes, insertions and deletions that initiate and promote cancer growth and spread. Somatic hypermutation is a powerful mechanism for generation of different mu...

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Autores principales: Kashuba, Vladimir I., Pavlova, Tatiana V., Grigorieva, Elvira V., Kutsenko, Alexey, Yenamandra, Surya Pavan, Li, Jingfeng, Wang, Fuli, Protopopov, Alexei I., Zabarovska, Veronika I., Senchenko, Vera, Haraldson, Klas, Eshchenko, Tatiana, Kobliakova, Julia, Vorontsova, Olga, Kuzmin, Igor, Braga, Eleonora, Blinov, Vladimir M., Kisselev, Lev L., Zeng, Yi-Xin, Ernberg, Ingemar, Lerman, Michael I., Klein, George, Zabarovsky, Eugene R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2684631/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19478941
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005231
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author Kashuba, Vladimir I.
Pavlova, Tatiana V.
Grigorieva, Elvira V.
Kutsenko, Alexey
Yenamandra, Surya Pavan
Li, Jingfeng
Wang, Fuli
Protopopov, Alexei I.
Zabarovska, Veronika I.
Senchenko, Vera
Haraldson, Klas
Eshchenko, Tatiana
Kobliakova, Julia
Vorontsova, Olga
Kuzmin, Igor
Braga, Eleonora
Blinov, Vladimir M.
Kisselev, Lev L.
Zeng, Yi-Xin
Ernberg, Ingemar
Lerman, Michael I.
Klein, George
Zabarovsky, Eugene R.
author_facet Kashuba, Vladimir I.
Pavlova, Tatiana V.
Grigorieva, Elvira V.
Kutsenko, Alexey
Yenamandra, Surya Pavan
Li, Jingfeng
Wang, Fuli
Protopopov, Alexei I.
Zabarovska, Veronika I.
Senchenko, Vera
Haraldson, Klas
Eshchenko, Tatiana
Kobliakova, Julia
Vorontsova, Olga
Kuzmin, Igor
Braga, Eleonora
Blinov, Vladimir M.
Kisselev, Lev L.
Zeng, Yi-Xin
Ernberg, Ingemar
Lerman, Michael I.
Klein, George
Zabarovsky, Eugene R.
author_sort Kashuba, Vladimir I.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Many different genetic alterations are observed in cancer cells. Individual cancer genes display point mutations such as base changes, insertions and deletions that initiate and promote cancer growth and spread. Somatic hypermutation is a powerful mechanism for generation of different mutations. It was shown previously that somatic hypermutability of proto-oncogenes can induce development of lymphomas. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We found an exceptionally high incidence of single-base mutations in the tumor suppressor genes RASSF1 and RBSP3 (CTDSPL) both located in 3p21.3 regions, LUCA and AP20 respectively. These regions contain clusters of tumor suppressor genes involved in multiple cancer types such as lung, kidney, breast, cervical, head and neck, nasopharyngeal, prostate and other carcinomas. Altogether in 144 sequenced RASSF1A clones (exons 1–2), 129 mutations were detected (mutation frequency, MF = 0.23 per 100 bp) and in 98 clones of exons 3–5 we found 146 mutations (MF = 0.29). In 85 sequenced RBSP3 clones, 89 mutations were found (MF = 0.10). The mutations were not cytidine-specific, as would be expected from alterations generated by AID/APOBEC family enzymes, and appeared de novo during cell proliferation. They diminished the ability of corresponding transgenes to suppress cell and tumor growth implying a loss of function. These high levels of somatic mutations were found both in cancer biopsies and cancer cell lines. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This is the first report of high frequencies of somatic mutations in RASSF1 and RBSP3 in different cancers suggesting it may underlay the mutator phenotype of cancer. Somatic hypermutations in tumor suppressor genes involved in major human malignancies offer a novel insight in cancer development, progression and spread.
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spelling pubmed-26846312009-05-29 High Mutability of the Tumor Suppressor Genes RASSF1 and RBSP3 (CTDSPL) in Cancer Kashuba, Vladimir I. Pavlova, Tatiana V. Grigorieva, Elvira V. Kutsenko, Alexey Yenamandra, Surya Pavan Li, Jingfeng Wang, Fuli Protopopov, Alexei I. Zabarovska, Veronika I. Senchenko, Vera Haraldson, Klas Eshchenko, Tatiana Kobliakova, Julia Vorontsova, Olga Kuzmin, Igor Braga, Eleonora Blinov, Vladimir M. Kisselev, Lev L. Zeng, Yi-Xin Ernberg, Ingemar Lerman, Michael I. Klein, George Zabarovsky, Eugene R. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Many different genetic alterations are observed in cancer cells. Individual cancer genes display point mutations such as base changes, insertions and deletions that initiate and promote cancer growth and spread. Somatic hypermutation is a powerful mechanism for generation of different mutations. It was shown previously that somatic hypermutability of proto-oncogenes can induce development of lymphomas. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We found an exceptionally high incidence of single-base mutations in the tumor suppressor genes RASSF1 and RBSP3 (CTDSPL) both located in 3p21.3 regions, LUCA and AP20 respectively. These regions contain clusters of tumor suppressor genes involved in multiple cancer types such as lung, kidney, breast, cervical, head and neck, nasopharyngeal, prostate and other carcinomas. Altogether in 144 sequenced RASSF1A clones (exons 1–2), 129 mutations were detected (mutation frequency, MF = 0.23 per 100 bp) and in 98 clones of exons 3–5 we found 146 mutations (MF = 0.29). In 85 sequenced RBSP3 clones, 89 mutations were found (MF = 0.10). The mutations were not cytidine-specific, as would be expected from alterations generated by AID/APOBEC family enzymes, and appeared de novo during cell proliferation. They diminished the ability of corresponding transgenes to suppress cell and tumor growth implying a loss of function. These high levels of somatic mutations were found both in cancer biopsies and cancer cell lines. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This is the first report of high frequencies of somatic mutations in RASSF1 and RBSP3 in different cancers suggesting it may underlay the mutator phenotype of cancer. Somatic hypermutations in tumor suppressor genes involved in major human malignancies offer a novel insight in cancer development, progression and spread. Public Library of Science 2009-05-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2684631/ /pubmed/19478941 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005231 Text en Kashuba et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kashuba, Vladimir I.
Pavlova, Tatiana V.
Grigorieva, Elvira V.
Kutsenko, Alexey
Yenamandra, Surya Pavan
Li, Jingfeng
Wang, Fuli
Protopopov, Alexei I.
Zabarovska, Veronika I.
Senchenko, Vera
Haraldson, Klas
Eshchenko, Tatiana
Kobliakova, Julia
Vorontsova, Olga
Kuzmin, Igor
Braga, Eleonora
Blinov, Vladimir M.
Kisselev, Lev L.
Zeng, Yi-Xin
Ernberg, Ingemar
Lerman, Michael I.
Klein, George
Zabarovsky, Eugene R.
High Mutability of the Tumor Suppressor Genes RASSF1 and RBSP3 (CTDSPL) in Cancer
title High Mutability of the Tumor Suppressor Genes RASSF1 and RBSP3 (CTDSPL) in Cancer
title_full High Mutability of the Tumor Suppressor Genes RASSF1 and RBSP3 (CTDSPL) in Cancer
title_fullStr High Mutability of the Tumor Suppressor Genes RASSF1 and RBSP3 (CTDSPL) in Cancer
title_full_unstemmed High Mutability of the Tumor Suppressor Genes RASSF1 and RBSP3 (CTDSPL) in Cancer
title_short High Mutability of the Tumor Suppressor Genes RASSF1 and RBSP3 (CTDSPL) in Cancer
title_sort high mutability of the tumor suppressor genes rassf1 and rbsp3 (ctdspl) in cancer
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2684631/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19478941
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005231
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