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Studies of the retinoblastoma gene in human sarcomas.

Authors :
Reissmann PT
Simon MA
Lee WH
Slamon DJ
Source :
Oncogene [Oncogene] 1989 Jul; Vol. 4 (7), pp. 839-43.
Publication Year :
1989

Abstract

The retinoblastoma susceptibility gene, (RB), is a tumor suppressor gene which, when deleted is associated with the development of retinoblastoma. The observation that children with heritable retinoblastoma frequently develop second malignancies, principally sarcomas, led to the detection of similar RB gene deletions in some osteosarcomas. We studied 44 unselected sarcomas from patients with no antecedent retinoblastoma to determine the prevalence and nature of RB gene alterations. DNA and RNA were extracted from fresh tumors and analysed by Southern and Northern blotting. Three of nine osteosarcomas and 4 of 29 soft-tissue sarcomas had deletions of the RB gene. Four of these were full-length, and three were partial deletions of the gene. RNA from 5 of the 7 deleted tumors was studied, and 4 cases completely lacked the RB transcript. Transcripts were found in 19 of 20 tumors with an apparently intact RB gene, and in all the normal tissues studied. An additional tumor lacked the RB transcript, but the gene appeared intact at the DNA level. In total, 8 of 38 sarcomas were found to have alterations of the RB gene. These data indicate that the RB gene is inactivated in a significant number of sarcomas unrelated to retinoblastoma, and that the potential role for the gene in the pathogenesis of human malignancy may not be limited to retinoblastoma.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0950-9232
Volume :
4
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Oncogene
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
2755701