Alterations of p16-pRb Pathway and Chromosome Locus 9p21–22 in Sporadic Invasive Breast Carcinomas
Open Access
- 1 December 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Molecular Medicine
- Vol. 4 (12) , 807-822
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf03401773
Abstract
The p16-pRb pathway represents a vital cell-cycle checkpoint. In the present study we investigated the alterations of this G1-phase protein pathway using immunohistochemical and molecular methods in a series of 55 breast carcinomas and correlated the findings with clinicopathological features of the patients. Furthermore, we examined its relationship with the status of the chromosomal region 9p21–22 performing a deletion map analysis because there are indications that, in addition to CDKN2 and MTS2/p15INK4B tumor suppressor genes (TSGs), this area harbors other TSG(s). Aberrant expression (Ab) of p16 and pRb was observed in 26 (47%) and 16 (29%) of the carcinomas, respectively. A statistical trend pointing out an inverse relationship between p16 and pRb expression was found (p = 0.079). Analysis of the region that encodes for p16 by deletion mapping, a PCR-based methylation assay and PCR-SSCP, revealed that deletions and transcriptional silencing by methylation might represent the main mechanisms of CDKN2/p16INK4A inactivation in breast carcinomas. The results of deletion mapping also suggest that another TSG(s) may reside at the 9p21–22 area particularly at the D9S162 loci and that co-deletion of this putative gene with CDKN2/p16INK4A may play a role in breast carcinogenesis. In addition, microsatellite instability (MI), a marker of replication error phenotype (RER+), was observed with a frequency of 16% in the area examined and was inversely related with loss of heterozygosity (LOH). Interestingly, most cases with MI at the region encoding for p16 were aggregated in a subgroup of breast carcinomas with no other obvious genetic and/or epigenetic CDKN2/p16INK4A alterations. We speculate that there is an additional mechanism of CDKN2/p16INK4A inactivation. The relationship of p16 protein level pRb, status, the p16-pRb combined immunoprofiles, and the microsatellite alterations detected at the 9p21–22 locus with the patients’ clinicopathological parameters revealed two significant correlations: one between normal pRb expression and lymph node involvement (p = 0.0263), and the other between microsatellite alterations (LOH and or MI) and tumor size (p = 9.2 × 10−3). In view of the heterogenous nature of breast cancer, we suggest that in a significant proportion of breast carcinomas, deregulation of the p16-pRb pathway in association with another, as-yet unidentified, TSG(s) of the 9p21–22 region may play a role in initiating or progressing the oncogenic procedure, while in other subgroups, alternative molecules may play this role.Keywords
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