Osteosarcoma and retinoblastoma: a shared chromosomal mechanism revealing recessive predisposition.
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 82 (18) , 6216-6220
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.82.18.6216
Abstract
Survivors of the heritable form of retinoblastoma subsequently develop second primary osteosarcomas at substantially greater frequency than either the general population or survivors of nonheritable retinoblastoma. Here we present molecular genetic evidence that the development of these two disparate tumor types involves specific somatic loss of constitutional heterozygosity for the region of human chromosome 13 that includes the RB1 locus. Similar events occur during the genesis of nonheritable osteosarcoma but not in several other embryonal tumors or sarcomas. These findings suggest that a conceptual approach toward defining the number of genes whose recessive mutant forms predispose to cancer is the molecular genetic analysis of clinically associated tumor types. They also suggest that the molecular basis of mixed cancer families may be differential expression of a single pleiotropic recessive mutation by tissue specific mitotic segregation abnormalities.This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Homozygosity of Chromosome 13 in RetinoblastomaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- Restriction sites containing CpG show a higher frequency of polymorphism in human DNACell, 1984
- Somatic inactivation of genes on chromosome 13 is a common event in retinoblastomaNature, 1983
- Gene for Hereditary Retinoblastoma Assigned to Human Chromosome 13 by Linkage to Esterase DScience, 1983
- Patient with 13 Chromosome Deletion: Evidence That the Retinoblastoma Gene Is a Recessive Cancer GeneScience, 1983
- Isolation and preliminary characterization of a human transforming gene from T24 bladder carcinoma cellsNature, 1982
- Late Extraocular Tumours in Retinoblastoma SurvivorsOphthalmologica, 1980
- Pleiotropic effects of the gene for retinoblastomaJournal of Medical Genetics, 1974
- Bilateral Retinoblastoma: A Dominantly Inherited AffectionBMJ, 1972
- Mutation and Cancer: Statistical Study of RetinoblastomaProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1971