High rates of ras codon 61 mutation in thyroid tumors in an iodide-deficient area.

  • 15 May 1991
    • journal article
    • Vol. 51  (10) , 2690-3
Abstract
Using polymerase chain reaction and sequence-specific oligonucleotide hybridization, the frequency of three ras oncogene mutations (N-ras, Ha-ras, and K-ras) in thyroid tumors (25 adenomas, 16 follicular carcinomas, and 22 papillary carcinomas) was investigated in both iodide-deficient and iodide-sufficient areas. The ras oncogene mutation rate was significantly higher in the iodide-deficient area, being 85 versus 17% in the adenomas, and 50 versus 10% in the follicular carcinomas. No mutations were found in papillary carcinomas. The most common mutation site was Ha-ras codon 61 with Gln----Arg substitution. Two ras mutations at codon 61 (Gln----Lys in N-ras and Gln----Arg in Ha-ras) were found in a microfollicular adenoma specimen from Eastern Hungary. We conclude that dietary iodine may modulate ras oncogene mutations, and that in the iodide-deficient area, ras oncogene activation may play a more important role in the initiation and/or maintenance of follicular tumors. Additional factors are, however, necessary to initiate carcinogenesis.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: