Genetic mechanisms in cancer predisposition.Report of a cancer family
- 1 February 1979
- Vol. 43 (2) , 679-689
- https://doi.org/10.1002/1097-0142(197902)43:2<679::aid-cncr2820430240>3.0.co;2-5
Abstract
A family is described in which four children developed cancer affecting different organs: lymphoma, meningeal sarcoma, osteogenic sarcoma, and adenocarcinoma of the cecum. Since there was only one other case of cancer in previous generations of this family, an hypothesis is put forth to explain this unusual aggregation on the basis of recombination of common genes. It is postulated that each parent carried a different combination of genes which, though not associated with increased cancer predisposition in the combinations in which they were present in the parents, due to independent assortment resulted in a combination producing cancer susceptibility in half of the offspring. Such genetic loci could include factors similar to an oncogene which is normally held in control by genes at another locus; thus the dominant oncogene without the dominant controlling genes would make for cancer susceptibility, while the controlling genes without the oncogene would be associated with cancer resistance since two mutations would then be required for malignant development. To explain the occurrence of lymphoma in one of the children in this family, a third set of genes is included in this model—genes affecting immunocompetence, in which the normal allele is dominant. This three locus model has the advantage of being able to explain not only the occasional cancer family, but also the distribution of cancer susceptibility and resistance in the general population. Cancer 43:679–689, 1979.This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Occurrence of childhood cancers among sibs and estimation of familial risks.Journal of Medical Genetics, 1977
- Dysplasia, Malformations and Cancer, Especially with Respect to the Wiedemann-Beckwith SyndromePublished by Springer Nature ,1977
- The Gardner syndrome: increased tetraploidy in cultured skin fibroblast.Journal of Medical Genetics, 1976
- Antibodies to epstein-barr virus in patients with Hodgkin's disease and leukemiaCancer, 1975
- A General Theory of CarcinogenesisProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1973
- Familial gastric cancer and immunologic abnormalitiesCancer, 1973
- Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma in Childhood: Epidemiologic FeaturesJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1973
- Cancer Frequency Variations Among and Within FamiliesActa geneticae medicae et gemellologiae, 1972
- Chromosome studies in a “cancer family”Cancer, 1971
- Chromosomes of SV40 Transformed Human Amnion Cells After Mycoplasma InfectionExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1970