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      Equivalent Parental Distribution of Frequently Lost Alleles and Biallelic Expression of the H19 Gene in Human Testicular Germ Cell Tumors

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          Abstract

          Epigenetic alterations such as genomic imprinting might play an important role in human tumorigenesis, in addition to specific genetic alterations. To clarify the role of genetic and/or epigenetic alterations in the tumorigenesis of testicular germ cell tumors (GCTs), we analyzed 40 primary and 3 metastatic testicular GCTs with regard to specific chromosomal losses and their parental origin. A high incidence of loss of heterozygosity (LOH) was demonstrated on chromosomes 1p, 3p, 11p, and 17p: 9/19 (47%), 18/39 (46%), 13/40 (33%) and 20/36 (56%), respectively. However, there was no correlation between the frequency of LOH on any chromosome and clinicopathological features. Regarding the parental origin of the lost allele at these chromosomes, preferential loss was not demonstrated in this study. To clarify the imprinting status in GCTs, we analyzed the allele‐specific expression of the H19 gene, which is paternally imprinted on chromosome 11p. All of 11 tumors without LOH at this locus showed biallelic expression of H19. Based on previous work demonstrating the biallelic expression of H19 in primordial germ cells and spermatogonia in the mouse germ line, these results suggest that the biallelic expression of H19 in testicular GCTs reflects the characteristics of the original germ cells in which the imprinting marking has been erased and not established, rather than loss of imprinting during tumorigenesis. It is also possible that a failure to re‐establish the imprinting might be an initial event which leads to testicular GCTs.

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          A genetic model for colorectal tumorigenesis.

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            Hypomethylation distinguishes genes of some human cancers from their normal counterparts.

            It has been suggested that cancer represents an alteration in DNA, heritable by progeny cells, that leads to abnormally regulated expression of normal cellular genes; DNA alterations such as mutations, rearrangements and changes in methylation have been proposed to have such a role. Because of increasing evidence that DNA methylation is important in gene expression (for review see refs 7, 9-11), several investigators have studied DNA methylation in animal tumours, transformed cells and leukaemia cells in culture. The results of these studies have varied; depending on the techniques and systems used, an increase, decrease, or no change in the degree of methylation has been reported. To our knowledge, however, primary human tumour tissues have not been used in such studies. We have now examined DNA methylation in human cancer with three considerations in mind: (1) the methylation pattern of specific genes, rather than total levels of methylation, was determined; (2) human cancers and adjacent analogous normal tissues, unconditioned by culture media, were analysed; and (3) the cancers were taken from patients who had received neither radiation nor chemotherapy. In four of five patients studied, representing two histological types of cancer, substantial hypomethylation was found in genes of cancer cells compared with their normal counterparts. This hypomethylation was progressive in a metastasis from one of the patients.
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              Silencing of the VHL tumor-suppressor gene by DNA methylation in renal carcinoma.

              Mutational inactivation and allelic loss of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) gene appear to be causal events for the majority of spontaneous clear-cell renal carcinomas. We now show that hypermethylation of a normally unmethylated CpG island in the 5' region provides another potentially important mechanism for inactivation of the VHL gene in a significant portion of these cancers. This hypermethylation was found in 5 of 26 (19%) tumors examined. Four of these had lost one copy of VHL while one retained two heavily methylated alleles. Four of the tumors with VHL hypermethylation had no detectable mutations, whereas one had a missense mutation in addition to hypermethylation of the single retained allele. As would be predicted for the consequence of methylation in this 5' CpG island, none of the 5 tumors expressed the VHL gene. In contrast, normal kidney and all tumors examined with inactivating VHL gene mutations but no CpG island methylation had expression. In a renal cell culture line, treatment with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine resulted in reexpression of the VHL gene. These findings suggest that aberrant methylation of CpG islands may participate in the tumor-suppressor gene inactivations which initiate or cause progression of common human cancers.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Jpn J Cancer Res
                Jpn. J. Cancer Res
                10.1111/(ISSN)1349-7006a
                CAS
                Japanese Journal of Cancer Research : Gann
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                0910-5050
                1876-4673
                August 1996
                : 87
                : 8 ( doiID: 10.1111/cas.1996.87.issue-8 )
                : 816-823
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Department of Urology, Faculty of Medicine, Kyoto University, 54 Kawahara‐cho, Shogoin, Sakyo‐ku, Kyoto 606
                [ 2 ]Cancer Genetics Laboratory, Department of Biochemistry, University of Otago, P. O. Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand
                Author notes
                [*] [* ]To whom requests for reprints should be addressed.
                Article
                CAE816
                10.1111/j.1349-7006.1996.tb02105.x
                5921178
                8797887
                4710bf96-624a-4512-8ee9-03102742aa8b
                History
                Page count
                References: 36, Pages: 8
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                August 1996
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:4.6.9 mode:remove_FC converted:04.11.2015

                testicular germ cell tumor,loss of heterozygosity,parental origin,imprinting,h19

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